Drug Consumption Rooms are safe spaces where people can use drugs under hygienic conditions, with support, and without fear of violence or legal repercussions. Today, more than 140 legally-sanctioned DCRs operate in 11 European countries, as well as in Australia, Canada, Mexico and the USA. Join us on a global video tour to discover why they were established, how they support their local communities and how these life-saving harm reduction facilities have evolved over time.
Search Results for: Features of Pdfvce NS0-521 PDF and Practice Exams 🎮 Simply search for ➠ NS0-521 🠰 for free download on ➥ www.pdfvce.com 🡄 😏NS0-521 Actual Dumps
Video Advocacy – A Useful Tool
Margina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, uses Drugreporter’s short film about their harm reduction service as an advocacy tool. Read about the process, and a review of the film written by a medical student.
Poland
EDPI Partner from Poland
Agnieszka Sieniawska
Master of Law, lawyer at the Polish Drug Policy Network’s Ombudsman for Addicts Program, and Jump 93 Association, chairwoman of the Polish Drug Policy Network
She conducts the Ombudsman for Addicts program. Within the project, she provides legal advice and draws up pleadings for people with legal problems or questions associated with drug use, drug addiction or possession of illicit psychoactive substances. In addition, in cooperation with other lawyers, she coordinates a team of 10 Warsaw University students, who also give legal advice to the same target group on behalf of the Law Clinic’s special section for Harm Reduction. The Ombudsman’s Office is also involved in interventions aimed at improving the quality of addiction treatment in Poland and changing the system of treatment, which up to now has been mainly informed by the abstinence principle. Initially, the Ombudsman Program dealt with legal advice (not traditionally understood to be the role of an ombudsman, but necessary, because provision for free legal aid for people who use drugs in our country is still sketchy, in spite of research indicating high needs in this area). The collected material of the Ombudsman for Addicts program has become an important element in the debate initiated by the Polish Drug Policy Network. It is also a source of information, which monitors rights violations and their causes.
Agnieszka Sieniawska is chairwoman of the Polish Drug Policy Network, a civil initiative dating from 2008. The main objectives of the Network are the following: first, to amend drug legislation, which currently penalises possession of any drug by 3 years’ imprisonment (art. 62.1 of the Act on counteracting drug addiction); and, secondly, to increase access to substitution treatment (in Poland, only 7% of those in need, are able to access substitution treatment) and expand the offer of substitution treatment programs by introducing new medicines. The Polish Drug Policy Network is a group of experts – addiction treatment specialists, doctors, lawyers, prison workers, social workers, teachers, and representatives of NGOs, as well as users. Together, they aspire to change drug legislation in Poland – the most restrictive in Europe.
In recent years, the Polish Drug Policy Network has been involved in the amendment of the draconian Polish law. It has also supported the move tof humanise drug legislation, based on harm reduction principles and respect for Human Rights. The Polish model of treating people with addictions needs to be improved significantly. Local governments, and the National Health Fund in charge of local drug policies, need to respect and implement the priorities identified in national strategies for addressing drug problems. On 9th December 2011, the new Law on Counteracting Drug Addiction entered into force – a small step towards liberalising national regulations. The new law gives prosecutors the option to decide against legal proceedings, if the level of social harm of the criminal act is very low. It opens a small window for both occasional drug users and problematic users, who will not have to be sentenced to imprisonment (but may instead be, for example, referred for treatment). The efforts of the Polish Drug Policy Network and the Ombudsman Program have also borne other fruit, in the shape of a methadone maintenance program in Gdansk. Addicts from the Pomerania region had been waiting nine years for such a program to be introduced.
Polish Drug Policy Network’s website: www.politykanarkotykowa.pl
Press kit – EECAAC, Moscow, October 28-30.
Dear Journalist!
We prepared this press kit to help to orientate at the Eastern European and Central Asia AIDS Conference.
A Bag of Bango
A Hungarian Journalist Investigating Egyptian Weed and Hashish
Homage to Catalonia: Cannabis Social Clubs
“The essence of the cannabis social club model is sharing,” explained a cannabis activist to a group of international professionals, who came to Barcelona to study the pioneering cannabis policies of Catalonia.
New forums for lobbying
HCLU is now represented at two major decision making forums in the field of drug policy.
Giving Hope to Drug Users in Moscow
Watch our movie on the Andrey Rylkov Foundation and support their fight for survival!
Crackdown on Civil Society – The Movie
This film – produced by the Rights Reporter Foundation, supported by AFEW International – features activists and civil society organisations who are being increasingly targeted by repressive governments in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The movie presents a story of oppression, resistance and survival seen through the eyes of human rights defenders. They dedicated their lives to support the human rights of some of the most stigmatized and criminalised groups in Eastern Europe and Central Asia to be able to access health services.
Investing in People, Not Jails: Drug Policy Reform in Scotland
Scotland is a textbook case of how the toxic combination of growing social exclusion and poverty, the diversification of drug markets, and repressive, abstinence-only drug policies can lead to a deadly drug overdose epidemic. A new paper published by the Scottish government gives us hope that the country can now set an example to other states on how to give a compassionate and pragmatic response to the crisis.