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Article
Elements of Well-being Affected by Criminalizing the Drug User
Public Health Reports (2002)
  • Martin Y. Iguchi, Rand Corporation
  • Laura J. Hickman, Portland State University
  • Jennifer A. London
  • Neil Griffith Forge
  • Terry Fain
  • Kara Riehman
Abstract
The authors examine the possible adverse consequences of incarceration on drug offenders, their families, and their communities. OBSERVATIONS: State and federal policies on drug felons may affect eight elements of personal and community well-being: children and families, access to health benefits, access to housing benefits, access to assistance for higher education, immigration status, employment, eligibility to vote, and drug use or recidivism. CONCLUSIONS: Minorities have a high chance of felony conviction and an increasing lack of access to resources, suggesting that patterns of drug conviction and health disparities may be mutually reinforcing. Large numbers of people sent to prison for drug offenses are now completing their terms and reentering communities. Their reentry will disproportionately affect minority communities. Without resources (education, job opportunities, insurance, health care, housing, and the right to vote) drug abusers face a higher risk of recidivism and increase the burden on their communities.
Keywords
  • Substance abuse -- Govrnment policy,
  • Drug abuse -- Social aspects,
  • Criminal law -- Philosophy,
  • Drug control -- United States
Disciplines
Publication Date
November, 2002
Citation Information
Martin Y. Iguchi, Laura J. Hickman, Jennifer A. London, Neil Griffith Forge, et al.. "Elements of Well-being Affected by Criminalizing the Drug User" Public Health Reports Vol. 117 Iss. Supplement 1 (2002)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/laura_hickman/26/