spacer
Topic quick links:
Cover page
spacer
All articles in this issue:
 EU National Drug Co-ordinators meet in Dublin
 Annual review of the drug situation in Europe
 How are the children?
 The President gets young people talking...
 ...and the Minister replies
 Young people appeal for a more inclusive society
 Guidelines for promoting mental health and suicide prevention in post-primary schools
 Healthy Ireland - implementation matters
 Launch of Galway City alcohol strategy
 Government policy on long-term homelessness
 INCB annual report 2012
 Education, addiction services and workforce development
 Alcohol Forum national conference
 Legal proceedings for drug offences 2004–2011
 Recent publications
 Upcoming events
 Ireland’s 7th EU Presidency and drug policy
 Commission on Narcotic Drugs meets for 56th Session
 Irish and Portuguese drug policies profiled
EU National Drug Co-ordinators meet in Dublin
by Brigid Pike (compiler)


 
Speakers at the EU National Drug Co-ordinators meeting:
Alex White TD, Minister of State at the Department of Health, hosted a meeting of the EU National Drug Co-ordinators in Dublin Castle on 8­–9 April 2013 as part of the Irish Presidency of the Council of the European Union. The meeting brought together drug policy formulators from member states and EU institutions.


Full story »



Annual review of the drug situation in Europe
by Brian Galvin


 
Cover - Annual review of the drug situation in Europe - with border.png
The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) published their European drug report 2013: trends and developments on 28th May.1 This year the centre’s annual overview of the European drug situation is presented in a new information package designed to be ‘more timely, interactive and interlinked’, and which replaces the former annual report. The shorter, graphic-rich report summarises the latest trends across the 27 EU member states, and Norway, Croatia and Turkey. Accompanying the 2013 report is a series of online interactive Perspectives on drugs (PODs) providing deeper insights into important issues.


Full story »



Ireland’s 7th EU Presidency and drug policy
by Brigid Pike


 
Ireland has earned a reputation for energetically pursuing drug policy issues when holding the Presidency of the Council of the European Union. For example, the first joint European action on drugs was adopted in December 1996 when Ireland held the Presidency.2 In 2004, during its next tenure of the Presidency, Ireland kicked off the development of the EU Drugs Strategy 2005–2012 with a major EU drugs conference in Dublin.3 During the first six months of this year, Ireland has presented a draft EU Action Plan on Drugs 2013–2016 to the other 26 member states and the EU institutions. Since then Ireland has worked steadily as ‘neutral arbiter’ to win agreement on its contents.4 It is anticipated that all outstanding issues will have been resolved by the time of the June meeting of the Council of Justice and Home Affairs Ministers and that the Council will  adopt the Plan.


Full story »



Commission on Narcotic Drugs meets for 56th Session
by Brigid Pike


Between 11 and 15 March 2013 over 1,000 representatives from UN member states and civil society met in Vienna for the 56th Session of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND).  The CND is the central policy-making body within the UN system dealing with illicit drugs and is the governing body for the work of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), which is based in Vienna. The CND provides member states and civil society with the opportunity to exchange expertise, experiences and information on drug-related matters and to develop a co-ordinated response.


Full story »



Irish and Portuguese drug policies profiled
by Brigid Pike


 
Drug policy in Ireland goes back nearly 150 years. In 1870, when Ireland was still part of the United Kingdom, legislation (the Poisons [Ireland] Act) was introduced to control the sale of various substances, including opium and morphine. Some sixty years later the Dangerous Drugs Act 1934 was passed in order to fulfill Ireland’s obligations under the League of Nations Convention for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs of 1931. So says a profile of Ireland’s drug policy recently published by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).1


Full story »
Email Software by Newsweaver