This article reports on a study which aimed to explore the extent to which drug policy making in Ireland might be deemed to be a rational, evidence-based process. The research was completed during the first half of 2008, as the National Drug Strategy 2001–2008 – which explicitly claimed to have research as one of its main ‘pillars’ – was coming to an end. Methodologically, the study used a combination of semi-structured interviews with key players in the policy process and case studies of specific elements of the drug strategy to determine whether and how research findings influenced policy decision making in this complex sphere. The findings generally reinforced the views of social scientists and policy analysts that no specific ‘inter...
This article is an analytic commentary which focuses on how politicians in the UK view the drugs pro...
In 2021, during a drug-related death crisis in the UK, the Government published its ten-year drugs s...
This thesis investigates the thorny relationship between evidence utilisation and policy making in a...
This study was aimed at exploring the extent to which drug policy making in Ireland may be deemed to...
This dissertation considers the case of Irish drugs policy in 1996 which saw a change in established...
Abstract The goal of public health and health promotion practitioners is to increase the health ...
In the context of ongoing public debate about the prevalence of alcohol-related problems in Ireland,...
While policy makers in the Republic of Ireland had been concerned with illicit drug use since the la...
This article aimed to fill a perceived gap in the analysis of Irish social policy, by reviewing soci...
The national drug policy of Ireland comes under the spotlight in the second volume in the EMCDDA ser...
Background: People who use drugs problematically are consistently left out of consultations and deli...
© 2014 Dr. Kerryn Michelle AdamsThis study critically examines the concept of evidence-based policy ...
Background: Policy decisions are informed by a number of factors: politics, ideology and values, per...
This paper is concerned with applying theories of the policy process to evaluating national drug str...
Background: There is growing interest in how drug policy is not just a technocratic process of fitti...
This article is an analytic commentary which focuses on how politicians in the UK view the drugs pro...
In 2021, during a drug-related death crisis in the UK, the Government published its ten-year drugs s...
This thesis investigates the thorny relationship between evidence utilisation and policy making in a...
This study was aimed at exploring the extent to which drug policy making in Ireland may be deemed to...
This dissertation considers the case of Irish drugs policy in 1996 which saw a change in established...
Abstract The goal of public health and health promotion practitioners is to increase the health ...
In the context of ongoing public debate about the prevalence of alcohol-related problems in Ireland,...
While policy makers in the Republic of Ireland had been concerned with illicit drug use since the la...
This article aimed to fill a perceived gap in the analysis of Irish social policy, by reviewing soci...
The national drug policy of Ireland comes under the spotlight in the second volume in the EMCDDA ser...
Background: People who use drugs problematically are consistently left out of consultations and deli...
© 2014 Dr. Kerryn Michelle AdamsThis study critically examines the concept of evidence-based policy ...
Background: Policy decisions are informed by a number of factors: politics, ideology and values, per...
This paper is concerned with applying theories of the policy process to evaluating national drug str...
Background: There is growing interest in how drug policy is not just a technocratic process of fitti...
This article is an analytic commentary which focuses on how politicians in the UK view the drugs pro...
In 2021, during a drug-related death crisis in the UK, the Government published its ten-year drugs s...
This thesis investigates the thorny relationship between evidence utilisation and policy making in a...