We use the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the demand for illicit drugs, and the implications of drug use for the probability of subsequent unemployment. We demonstrate that the BCS questionnaire has a serious design flaw for this purpose, and propose some simple modifications. We also develop a modelling technique suitable for existing BCS data, and apply it to the 1994/96 sample. We find evidence that soft drug use is associated with a greatly increased probability of later hard drug use, and that past drug use is associated with increased probabilities of unemployment
Background: It is generally accepted that harms from crime cause a very large part of the total soci...
We contribute to the small, but important, literature exploring the incidence and implications of mi...
Study objective: To establish the prevalence of problem drug use in the 10 local authorities within ...
We use the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the demand for illicit drugs, and the implications ...
We use the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the demand for illicit drugs, and the implications ...
We use data from the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the relationship between illicit drug use...
The subject of this thesis is illicit drug use in the UK. Given the wide-ranging implications of ill...
This study, using data from the British Crime Survey (BCS), examines the effect of drug use on occup...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.9497(98/11) / BLDSC - British Li...
In this paper the employment of Scottish and English self-reporting drug users is considered using d...
Data from a previous study of 1036 young people in the Lothian region that indicated an association ...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The Arrestee Survey, 2003-200...
Previous capture-recapture studies have estimated the prevalence of problem drug misuse in urban are...
The use of illicit drugs is an area of interest across a broad range of industries and fields includ...
This paper uses data from the Global Drug Survey to test the hypothesis that there is social bias in...
Background: It is generally accepted that harms from crime cause a very large part of the total soci...
We contribute to the small, but important, literature exploring the incidence and implications of mi...
Study objective: To establish the prevalence of problem drug use in the 10 local authorities within ...
We use the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the demand for illicit drugs, and the implications ...
We use the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the demand for illicit drugs, and the implications ...
We use data from the British Crime Survey (BCS) to analyse the relationship between illicit drug use...
The subject of this thesis is illicit drug use in the UK. Given the wide-ranging implications of ill...
This study, using data from the British Crime Survey (BCS), examines the effect of drug use on occup...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.9497(98/11) / BLDSC - British Li...
In this paper the employment of Scottish and English self-reporting drug users is considered using d...
Data from a previous study of 1036 young people in the Lothian region that indicated an association ...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The Arrestee Survey, 2003-200...
Previous capture-recapture studies have estimated the prevalence of problem drug misuse in urban are...
The use of illicit drugs is an area of interest across a broad range of industries and fields includ...
This paper uses data from the Global Drug Survey to test the hypothesis that there is social bias in...
Background: It is generally accepted that harms from crime cause a very large part of the total soci...
We contribute to the small, but important, literature exploring the incidence and implications of mi...
Study objective: To establish the prevalence of problem drug use in the 10 local authorities within ...