Illegal Drugs
Illegal Drugs | Drug Treatment Programs Are Often Ineffective
Today’s addicts are the most visible casualties of the permissive culture and the drug fad of the late 1960s, the 1970s and the early 1980s. These addicts have moved up in the ranks from casual users. They are largely aging, never married and predominantly male. Most commit crimes—including selling drugs—as a means of income to purchase drugs. They also are concentrated largely among blacks and live in our inner cities. While these addicts constitute the single-largest demand for heroin and cocaine in the United States, they also use a variety of other drugs (particularly...
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- Introduction
- Is There a Drug Abuse Crisis?
- Should Drug Testing Be Allowed?
-
Are Antidrug Programs Effective?
- Chapter 3 Preface
- The D.A.R.E. Program Is Effective
- Prison Drug Treatment Programs Are Effective
- Cocaine Treatment Programs Are Effective
- Methadone Is an Effective Treatment for Heroin Addiction
- The D.A.R.E. Program Has Been Ineffective
- Drug Treatment Programs Are Often Ineffective
- Classroom Drug Education Has Been a Failure
- Should Illegal Drugs Be Legalized?
- Periodicals
- Organizations to Contact
- Bibliography
- Copyright
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