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Table of Contents

Addictive Properties of Popular DrugsPDFPrint
AdolescentsPDFPrint
AlcoholPDFPrint
Annual Causes of Death in the United StatesPDFPrint
Asset ForfeiturePDFPrint
Civil and Human RightsPDFPrint
Cocaine & CrackPDFPrint
CorruptionPDFPrint
CrimePDFPrint
Diversion of Pharmaceutical DrugsPDFPrint
Drug Courts & Treatment Alternatives to IncarcerationPDFPrint
Drug InterdictionPDFPrint
Drug TestingPDFPrint
Drug Use EstimatesPDFPrint
EconomicsPDFPrint
EnvironmentPDFPrint
Families, Youth & StudentsPDFPrint
Gateway TheoryPDFPrint
HempPDFPrint
Hepatitis CPDFPrint
HeroinPDFPrint
Heroin Assisted Treatment/Heroin MaintenancePDFPrint
HIV/AIDS & Injection Drug UsePDFPrint
IbogainePDFPrint
International - Acceding and Candidate Countries to the European UnionPDFPrint
International - AustraliaPDFPrint
International - BelgiumPDFPrint
International - CanadaPDFPrint
International - DenmarkPDFPrint
International - European UnionPDFPrint
International - FrancePDFPrint
International - GermanyPDFPrint
International - GreecePDFPrint
International - SpainPDFPrint
International - The NetherlandsPDFPrint
Mandatory Minimum SentencingPDFPrint
MarijuanaPDFPrint
Medical MarijuanaPDFPrint
Methadone Maintenance & Buprenorphine TherapyPDFPrint
MethamphetaminePDFPrint
Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA or Ecstasy)PDFPrint
Military ParticipationPDFPrint
OverdosePDFPrint
Pain ManagementPDFPrint
PortugalPDFPrint
Pregnancy & Substance UsePDFPrint
Prevention & EducationPDFPrint
Prisons & Drug OffendersPDFPrint
Prisons, Jails & Probation - OverviewPDFPrint
Race and PrisonPDFPrint
Race, HIV/AIDS and the Drug WarPDFPrint
Russian FederationPDFPrint
Supervised Consumption Facilities & Safe Injection FacilitiesPDFPrint
SwedenPDFPrint
SwitzerlandPDFPrint
Syringe/Needle Exchange ProgramsPDFPrint
The Netherlands Compared With The United StatesPDFPrint
TreatmentPDFPrint
United KingdomPDFPrint
United StatesPDFPrint
Women & The Drug WarPDFPrint
 

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Did You Know?

According to a federal survey of jail inmates, of the total 440,670 jail inmates in the US in 2002, 112,447 were drug offenders: 48,823 for possession, 56,574 for trafficking.
 
Source: 
Karberg, Jennifer C. and Doris J. James, US Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, "Substance Dependence, Abuse, and Treatment of Jail Inmates, 2002" (Washington, DC: US Dept. of Justice, July 2005), Table 7, p. 6.