In 1998, the member states of the United Nations committed to the objective of achieving by 2008 “significant and measurable results in the field of demand reduction” and to make “real progress in eliminating or reducing significantly crops of opium poppy, coca and cannabis”. One of the central principles underpinning those joint efforts and the commitment of the international community was shared responsibility, the moral obligation that countries with high levels of drug consumption (consumer countries) should assist countries with high levels of drug production (the traditional supplier or producer countries)
By Benoît Gomis, research analyst at the International Security Research Department of Chatham House
It is almost a cliché that higher education today must be internationalised if it were to be deemed ...
On 2 February 2012 the LSE’s European Foreign Policy Unit hosted the fourth of ten roundtables on ‘E...
This year’s Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND), the United Nations central policy-making body on dru...
After decades as a seemingly unchallengeable feature of the new global system, the prohibition of dr...
In 2012 Chile, Peru, Colombia and Mexico launched the Pacific Alliance, the latest of countless orga...
It is increasingly clear that there is a fundamental lack of oversight of how international aid – pr...
The difference between the upcoming U.S. presidential election and previous iterations is that Repub...
Last month, in a tiny village of central Colombia called Cajamarca, a local referendum was conducted...
Brazilian flags have been highly visible on Ramallah streets over the past few days, almost as much ...
The high magnitude earthquake that hit Haiti in 2010, devastating much of the country’s already frag...
Much of the recent attention to the leaked American diplomatic cables has involved gossip and variou...
Katya Ivanova is a doctoral candidate in the LSE European Institute. She is interested in internatio...
After fifty years of war the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FA...
This article briefly describes why the State parties to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapo...
By Benoît Gomis, research analyst at the International Security Research Department of Chatham House
It is almost a cliché that higher education today must be internationalised if it were to be deemed ...
On 2 February 2012 the LSE’s European Foreign Policy Unit hosted the fourth of ten roundtables on ‘E...
This year’s Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND), the United Nations central policy-making body on dru...
After decades as a seemingly unchallengeable feature of the new global system, the prohibition of dr...
In 2012 Chile, Peru, Colombia and Mexico launched the Pacific Alliance, the latest of countless orga...
It is increasingly clear that there is a fundamental lack of oversight of how international aid – pr...
The difference between the upcoming U.S. presidential election and previous iterations is that Repub...
Last month, in a tiny village of central Colombia called Cajamarca, a local referendum was conducted...
Brazilian flags have been highly visible on Ramallah streets over the past few days, almost as much ...
The high magnitude earthquake that hit Haiti in 2010, devastating much of the country’s already frag...
Much of the recent attention to the leaked American diplomatic cables has involved gossip and variou...
Katya Ivanova is a doctoral candidate in the LSE European Institute. She is interested in internatio...
After fifty years of war the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FA...
This article briefly describes why the State parties to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapo...
By Benoît Gomis, research analyst at the International Security Research Department of Chatham House
It is almost a cliché that higher education today must be internationalised if it were to be deemed ...
On 2 February 2012 the LSE’s European Foreign Policy Unit hosted the fourth of ten roundtables on ‘E...