UID:
edoccha_9958109065702883
Format:
xxiii, 362 pages :
,
illustrations ;
,
23 cm.
Edition:
1st ed.
ISBN:
0-8213-8036-2
,
1-282-69776-5
,
9786612697760
,
0-8213-8035-4
Series Statement:
World Bank e-Library.
Content:
The drug policies of wealthy consuming countries emphasize criminalization, interdiction, and eradication. Such extreme responses to social challenges risk unintended, costly consequences. The evidence presented in this volume is that these consequences are high in the case of current drug policies, particularly for poor transit and producer countries. These costs include the deaths of thousands in the conflict between drug cartels and security forces, political instability, and the infiltration of criminal elements into governments, on the one hand; and increased narcotics use in countries th
Note:
Description based upon print version of record.
,
Contents; Foreword; About the Editors and Authors; Abbreviations; Introduction; 1 Drug Prohibition and Developing Countries: Uncertain Benefits, Certain Costs; Figures; Tables; 2 The Historical Foundations of the Narcotic Drug Control Regime; 3 Can Production and Trafficking of Illicit Drugs Be Reduced or Only Shifted?; 4 Evaluating Plan Colombia; 5 Evo, Pablo, Tony, Diego, and Sonny: General Equilibrium Analysis of the Market for Illegal Drugs; 6 Competitive Advantages in the Production and Trafficking of Coca-Cocaine and Opium-Heroin in Afghanistan and the Andean Countries
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7 Cocaine Production and Trafficking: What Do We Know?8 Responding to the Challenge of Afghanistan's Opium Economy: Development Lessons and Policy Implications; Box; Index
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-8213-8034-6
Language:
English