Drugs, drug use, drug policy and health
Created by Michel Kazatchkine (Université de Genève) and offered for free on Coursera.
Description from the course homepage:
This MOOC is the first of its kind, since it addresses critical issues related to drugs from a multidisciplinary, health and human rights-based approach. Throughout the course you will cover a range of questions including what are drugs and why they controlled? What are the benefits and harms of taking drugs? How public health policies can address drug use? You will also learn about the intricacies of the international drug control framework and the negative consequences of widespread prohibitionist drug policies around the world. Finally, you will examine ways of furthering drug policy reform. The topics will be presented by over 40 speakers from scientific, academic and institutional backgrounds, spokespersons of civil society as well as people who use drugs presenting their views. By the end of the course you will have: - a strong understanding of the major health issues related to drug use and drug policy; - a clear vision of why drug policy is debated today; - and, if you so wish, you will be equipped to engage in the drug policy reform movement at your local or regional level.
This course teaches the foundations to what constitutes basically all drug policy in the world from 1961 and on. At the very least, as most of the people reading this thread probably know it to be. One of the first things taught in this course by Geneva University is in reference to the International Drug Control Framework + the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Geneva Convention in 1961 which started the framework for drug policy as we know it today, internationally.
I first came across this course about two years ago, and to this day I keep coming back on occasion to re-register for the essential and extra reading portions. The information here is amazing and if you or I were to actually read all of it, through and through and study our own countries policies as well? A much greater understanding of drug policy in general on every level.
I don’t know how many people here participate in any actual advocacy and activism for a greater inclusion of harm reduction in drug policy - or for drug policy change in general. This course here has a really crucial set of information to get started on.
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