Bulletin de Périodique
Druglink , Vol.28, n°3 - May-June 2013 - Has the Work Programme dug itself into a hole?
Paru le :
01/05/2013
Année
2013
Page(s) :
28 p.
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Note de contenu :
CONTENTS:
NEWS:
• Plain packaging ditched
• Alcohol industry 'distorted' evidence
• Cannabis for crack
• Agonies and ecstasies: new Global Drug Survey
• Obituaries: Professor Geoff Pearson; Steve Abrams
• Opium reporting flawed
• PMA deaths
• Hep C services in London
• Bad cannabis science
FEATURES:
• COVER STORY - The work-work balance. Paul Anders looks at the widely criticised Work Programme and considers its significance for the drug and alcohol sector.
• White riot - How cocaine is fuelling a new breed of football thug. By Max Daly.
• The Druglink interview - Professor John Strang from the National Addiction Centre
• The evidence debate - How relevant is the randomized-controlled study for the addictions field. Tim Leighton and Ed Day debate the issue.
• People power - Mark Gilman argues that for some recovering addicts, social networks could be the difference between life and death.
• A live and kicking in doors - Former Met police officer Geoff Monaghan responds to Matthew Bacon's article in January/February Druglink, challenging the idea that police have given up on drug enforcement.
REGULARS:
• Reviews - Krijn Peters on the 'war on drugs' in Africa; Luke Mitcheson reviews the Cochrane handbook on substance misuse; Kay Nooney on drugs and gender; reviews in brief by Blaine Stothard.
• Maia Szalavitz's New York Notes.
NEWS:
• Plain packaging ditched
• Alcohol industry 'distorted' evidence
• Cannabis for crack
• Agonies and ecstasies: new Global Drug Survey
• Obituaries: Professor Geoff Pearson; Steve Abrams
• Opium reporting flawed
• PMA deaths
• Hep C services in London
• Bad cannabis science
FEATURES:
• COVER STORY - The work-work balance. Paul Anders looks at the widely criticised Work Programme and considers its significance for the drug and alcohol sector.
• White riot - How cocaine is fuelling a new breed of football thug. By Max Daly.
• The Druglink interview - Professor John Strang from the National Addiction Centre
• The evidence debate - How relevant is the randomized-controlled study for the addictions field. Tim Leighton and Ed Day debate the issue.
• People power - Mark Gilman argues that for some recovering addicts, social networks could be the difference between life and death.
• A live and kicking in doors - Former Met police officer Geoff Monaghan responds to Matthew Bacon's article in January/February Druglink, challenging the idea that police have given up on drug enforcement.
REGULARS:
• Reviews - Krijn Peters on the 'war on drugs' in Africa; Luke Mitcheson reviews the Cochrane handbook on substance misuse; Kay Nooney on drugs and gender; reviews in brief by Blaine Stothard.
• Maia Szalavitz's New York Notes.
Résumé :
Since its introduction in mid-2011, the Department for Work and Pensions flagship Work Programme (WP) has come in for widespread criticism. In our free article this month, Paul Anders looks at the WP in detail, and considers its relevance for the drug and alcohol sector.
Cote :
Abonnement
Historique