Abstract: Although Americans are arguably more committed than ever to the ideal of universal education, the drug war has effectively withdrawn this commitment from many teenagers and young adults who are most at risk. It has done so in several related ways that we explore in this article. First, the drug war has combined with public school zero-tolerance policies to remove tens of thousands of adolescents from their public schools. Second, denial of higher education has been adopted as an additional punishment for drug offenders. Under the Drug Free Student Loans Act of 1998, students who have ever been convicted of a drug offense are either temporarily or permanently ineligible for federal college loans and grants. This law has led to the ...
Drug abuse and addiction, and the government\u27s response to these problems, are frequently and app...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon formally declared a “war on drugs” that would be directed to combat...
The article attempts to critically evaluate a controversial transnational phenomenon in the Western ...
Nixon's War on Drugs served to bring the body of the individual under the increasing\ud scrutiny of ...
In 2002 Project DARE (drug abuse resistance education) marked its 20-year anniversary as a school-ba...
Beginning in the 1980’s, America began a ‘war on crime’, taking a tougher stance with longer sentenc...
My study will analyze the following question: To what degree has the War on Drugs affected the recid...
This paper examines what drug education programs might look like if drugs were legalized. KEY WORDS:...
There is a growing recognition in the fields of public health and medicine that social determinants ...
abstract: Abstract What began in 1971 as a "War on Drugs," led to the political position of being "t...
Students\u27 help is needed in both planning and conducting workshops if the program is to provide m...
In 1971, President Richard Nixon named drug abuse as “public enemy number one” in the United States....
There is a growing recognition in the fields of public health and medicine that social determinants ...
The differences in treatment between Black and white Americans in the past fifty years has been a to...
For 40 years now, the War on Drugs has continued to damage millions of African American lives around...
Drug abuse and addiction, and the government\u27s response to these problems, are frequently and app...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon formally declared a “war on drugs” that would be directed to combat...
The article attempts to critically evaluate a controversial transnational phenomenon in the Western ...
Nixon's War on Drugs served to bring the body of the individual under the increasing\ud scrutiny of ...
In 2002 Project DARE (drug abuse resistance education) marked its 20-year anniversary as a school-ba...
Beginning in the 1980’s, America began a ‘war on crime’, taking a tougher stance with longer sentenc...
My study will analyze the following question: To what degree has the War on Drugs affected the recid...
This paper examines what drug education programs might look like if drugs were legalized. KEY WORDS:...
There is a growing recognition in the fields of public health and medicine that social determinants ...
abstract: Abstract What began in 1971 as a "War on Drugs," led to the political position of being "t...
Students\u27 help is needed in both planning and conducting workshops if the program is to provide m...
In 1971, President Richard Nixon named drug abuse as “public enemy number one” in the United States....
There is a growing recognition in the fields of public health and medicine that social determinants ...
The differences in treatment between Black and white Americans in the past fifty years has been a to...
For 40 years now, the War on Drugs has continued to damage millions of African American lives around...
Drug abuse and addiction, and the government\u27s response to these problems, are frequently and app...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon formally declared a “war on drugs” that would be directed to combat...
The article attempts to critically evaluate a controversial transnational phenomenon in the Western ...