ABSTRACT

This title was first first published in 2002: Understanding the link between institutional contexts and drug problems is crucial to the process of developing appropriate drug policies and drug demand reduction strategies. However, this link is too often taken for granted, with most drug-related research relying on epidemiological, bio-medical or clinical approaches, ignoring the social contexts in which drug use finds its causes and where its consequences are most visible and hardest felt. This book analyses the institutional responses to the drug problem in the States of Central and Eastern Europe, providing conclusive evidence that the drug problem is a social one and that its causes emerge from a broad array of social factors. Charting the changing policy perceptions and attitudes towards drugs and related problems alongside new organizations designed to counteract drug-related problems, the book provides important new insights into one of the most important problems confronting nations around the world.

part I|1 pages

Country Studies

chapter 2|63 pages

The Drug Problem in the Czech Republic

In Search of an Institutional Structure

chapter 3|45 pages

Drug Demand Reduction in Hungary

The Two Worlds of Prevalence and Perception

chapter 4|68 pages

Institutional Responses to Drug Problems in Poland

On the Crossroads

chapter 5|70 pages

The Institutional Response to Drug-Related Problems in Slovenia

Balancing Between Harm Reduction and Abstinence Approaches

part II|1 pages

Comparative Analyses

chapter 6|14 pages

What Are The Interrelationships Between Drug Problems and Drug Policy?

Lessons from the Analyses of the Institutional Context

chapter 7|25 pages

The Perception of the Drug Problem and Opinions on National Policies

Can We Think Beyond Borders?