CICAD evaluates regional performance on drug front
At the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission’s meeting in Colombia
in November 2007, the delegates took the pulse of the hemisphere’s health regarding the drug problem by reviewing and approving
evaluation reports on the performance of 34 member states of the Multilateral
Evaluation Mechanism as well as examining hemispheric trends in drug trafficking
and abuse.
Because the event took place in Santa Marta, the participants were able to
witness first-hand how drug trafficking has impacted the Colombian countryside.
[Photo: above, Guillermo Francisco Reyes González, CICAD Chair
and Colombian Vice Minister of Justice, speaks to the delegates. CICAD Executive
Secretary James Mack and Vice Chair María Soledad Weinstein (Chile) share the
podium.]
Read the full
story...
Special Report: CICAD surveys Alternative Development options
At its forty second regular session of CICAD, delegates from 26 member states discussed the options
available for implementing a rural development strategy that steers growers
away from illicit crops like coca, poppy and marijuana.
Past and present initiatives, including CICAD's own efforts, were examined
to extract lessons to be learned. International partners contributed their
experience.
Increasingly, the international community sees Alternative Development not only as a
means to reduce illicit drug supply but as an instrument to reinforce
integral, sustainable development in communities and territories affected by
illicit crops growth and as part of the strategy against poverty and
inequality. Several proposals will be evaluated by an Expert Group on
Alternative Development that was mandated by the Commission. Read the full
story...
Leveraging chocolate in the development formula
Cacao has been one of the most attractive cash crops that fit into a rural
development formula in the Andes because it has an established world market,
is environmentally friendly and is a native perennial crop, but it has failed to match
expectations up to now. CICAD is participating in a new public-private alliance to tackle
the obstacles to regional success in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.
[Photo, on the right, cocoa beans dry in the sun.] Read the full
story...
Concept paper: getting a handle on alternative development
For a long time, experts could not even agree on what to call it. Now, more
importantly, debate is moving towards how to deliver it in difficult
environments. The CICAD Executive Secretariat prepared a white paper to
frame the discussion at the Santa Marta meeting, based on the belief that only with a mature understanding
of the issues and strategic options can the public policy debate advance.
Several specific proposals for future action were put forward for the
Commission's consideration. Available in PDF format (84 kb), the article is online...
Loading knowledge in the circuit
CICAD has brought online the Spanish language version of the Alternative
Development Knowledge Network (ADKN).
Backed by nearly 20 international and national organizations in Asia, Europe
and the Americas, the ADKN provides knowledge-sharing and communication
tools for people working in rural development, especially in remote,
drug-crop producing and highland regions. The network focuses on
"sustainable agricultural production systems that can balance productivity
and environmental conservation and how to connect farming communities to
modern markets." The project started out in English.
[Photo: on the right, Bolivian farmers produce organic bananas for
domestic and international consumers.]
CICAD turns over geographic information system to Bolivian government
The Generalized Land-Use Evaluation and Management Tool — or GLEAM — is a
remote imaging-based information system that generates spatial and
agro-economic information about current land use and determines the real and
hypothetical scenarios for soils as well as the economic feasibility of
specific crops. Developed originally by CICAD for a project in Peru in 1998,
the system has been used most recently in Bolivia for the formulation, execution and
monitoring of agricultural projects, as well as decision making on
agricultural policy and development. At the end of 2007, CICAD handed
over the responsibility for the GIS system to the Bolivian government for use in
its rural development programs.
News and activities
First class of
drug counselors graduate in El Salvador program
Salvadoran President Elias Antonio Saca underscored the importance of the
CICAD-sponsored training program for addiction counseling when he handed
out certificates to the first graduating class. [Photo: on the right, President
Saca addresses drug addiction counselors in San Salvador] At the January 18
ceremony, 310 drug counselors from non-governmental and governmental treatment
centers received their certificates. The program in El Salvador was
administered by FUNDASALVA, non-governmental organization specialized in drug
dependency prevention, treatment and rehabilitation, and consisted of 160 hours
of coursework in best practices in prevention, clinical standards, and
managerial and leadership skills. The
program is currently getting underway in Guatemala where 43 non-governmental
treatment centers have expressed interest in sending their staff for training.
See the
Observer No. 18 feature for more details about the program.
Specialized training on detecting illegal Internet sales
The challenge of illegal distribution via the Internet of internationally
controlled licit substances is like
nothing else confronted by law enforcement in the region. These transactions,
which can be for painkillers without a medical prescription or a facade for
selling counterfeit Viagra pills, disappear into overseas money accounts, front
companies and anonymous post office boxes. In response to this growing problem
and in partnership with Microsoft, CICAD delivered a series of five seminars in
Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Jamaica and Mexico on the tools, resources and
techniques needed to investigate the sale of drugs over the Internet. These
seminars trained more than 150 specialists drawn from regional law enforcement
agencies. Funding came from the U.S. Narcotics
Affairs Sections (NAS) in the host countries and those governments sending
participants.
Other CICAD activities
The forty third regular session of CICAD will be held in Washington, DC
on April 30-May 2... The European Union-Latin American and the
Caribbean Drug Treatment City Partnerships initiative has unveiled its
website. Under CICAD's
management, the program to share experiences of drug treatment at the local
level will have its first forum in Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic,
April 2-5, 2008... The Multilateral Evaluation Mechanism (MEM) section is coordinating a preparatory
meeting of the Intergovernmental Working Group to gleam lessons learned from
the latest round, set for March 25-28 in Buenos
Aires...
Online
Resources: Two perspectives on addiction
Alcohol, Gender, Culture and Harms in the Americas
(69 pages, PDF format, 1.7 mb, also available in Spanish) is the final report of a multi-centric study
carried out by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).
The report covers studies in Argentina, Belize, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Peru, Uruguay and the United States. The study confirms what the
Inter-American Observatory on Drugs (OID) has also found in its own regional studies on drug use: "This new survey
data highlight the importance of disaggregating sub-regional WHO data to the
country level in order to see differences in consumption and corresponding risk
of alcohol–attributable outcomes at the country level and thus inform
country-specific alcohol policies capable of addressing the specific alcohol
consumption profiles and problems." [Illustration: on the right,
cover art of the report Alcohol, Gender, Culture and Harms in the Americas.]
HBO's series Addiction was
awarded the 2007 Nancy Dickerson Whitehead Award for excellence in reporting on
drug and alcohol problems, given by the
Drug Strategies, a US
nonprofit research institute. The documentary series is an insightful, sensitive
analysis of the impact of drug abuse in the United States. It combines gripping personal
stories of addicts and their families with the growing science of addiction
studies by addressing several aspects: adult and adolescent
addiction, treatment, aftercare, and stigma and discrimination. A series
DVD and a
book are
available online. The website has extensive resource materials, including video excerpts
as well as a
resource page. AddictionAction
is an affiliated program to take the project's message out into communities. The project was backed by a partnership with the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the
National Institute on Drug Addiction,
and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism, all of the United States.
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