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World Drug Report 2004 Volume 1: Analysis

NCJ Number
206055
Date Published
2004
Length
210 pages
Annotation
This 2004 World Drug Report presents supply (production and trafficking) and demand statistics, as well as analysis of the evolution of the global illicit drug problem through 2003.
Abstract
The first chapter is a status report on the world drug problem. It opens with a review of the "policy landscape," which notes that three international drug conventions have helped to galvanize and guide nations in their development of a multilateral drug control system. The policy review is followed by a discussion of the dynamics of world drug markets, which includes presentations on the current level of drug use in the world, how the drug problem is evolving, the outlook for world drug markets, injecting drug use and HIV/AIDS, and conceptual advances in drug control. The latter discussion focuses on a holistic approach, a more synergistic approach, and a more dynamic approach. The chapter on trends provides an analysis of the evolution of the production, trafficking, and abuse of opium/heroin, coca/cocaine, cannabis, and amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS). The concluding overview of the report indicates that illicit drug use involves less than 5 percent of individuals in the age group 15-64, making the prevalence of illicit drug use at the global level much lower than for tobacco use, which involves approximately 30 percent of the world's population. The production and abuse of both opium and cocaine has declined significantly over the years; however, the available data for cannabis suggest that the cannabis market continued to increase over the last few years. The number of ATS laboratories dismantled increased during the last decade, including over the 1998-2002. Seizures of ecstasy continued to increase. Still, there were signs that the upward trend in ecstasy use may be losing momentum. Conceptual developments in recent years offer prospects of reinvigorated drug-control strategies. Extensive figures and tables