Friday, January 21, 2011

Welcoming 2 more new SSDP chapters this week

With students going back to school, it's certainly been a busy week for student drug policy reform! As administrators get back to work as well, two more SSDP chapters have gained official student group approval from their schools, and now we're excited to welcome Tufts University and Utah State University to our chapter network.

Tufts University Boston, MA (Northeast Region)
Alex Baskin heard about SSDP in the Spring of 2010 through his friends who lead our chapter at Rutgers University New Brunswick and "was blown away" by the work the chapter was doing on a city wide lowest law enforcement priority initiative. He has been working on establishing a chapter of his own at Tufts University ever since. The first order of business for Tufts SSDP will be addressing campus marijuana policies that still sanction students through the judicial system for marijuana possession, which is no longer a crime in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (possession of up to 28 grams of cannabis was decriminalized when Question 2 passed the legislature in 2009).

Utah State University Logan, UT (Mountain Plains Region)
Last September, Adam Black was looking for ways to get involved in drug policy reform when he came across our website. He says that Logan, Utah is a college town experiencing some of the most aggressive drug law enforcement with some of the harshest penalties in the world. USU SSDP is determined to do something about that.

Students for Sensible Drug Policy is active across the United States with official chapters at over 150 high schools, colleges, universities, graduate & law schools. We also have chapter networks forming in several countries outside of the U.S. Visit our website to join or start one at your school today, and to access our activist resources including our comprehensive Student Organizing Manual.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Announcing 3 new official SSDP chapters!

We're proud to announce three newly established SSDP chapters this week, making them the first additions to our chapter network in 2011! As we officially welcome University of Akron, Central Washington University & University of Florida by adding them to the map, we'd also like to take this opportunity to tell you about the students who stepped up to lead the student drug policy reform movement at their school by founding an SSDP chapter.
University of Akron - Akron, OH (Midwest Region)
Anthony Burrows has been working to establish an SSDP chapter at U of A for almost exactly a year! In January 2010, he came across our website while searching for organizations whose missions are focused on ending the war on drugs. He was faced with obstacle after obstacle in his quest to establish an active SSDP chapter at U of A, navigating through administrative red tape for much of the Fall 2010 semester, but he wasn't going to let a little bureaucracy stop him. Finally, last week, Anthony received word from his school administration that his student organization recognition request has been approved!

Central Washington University - Ellensburg, WA (Western Region)
Brian Grimmer discovered SSDP in October of last year while researching medical marijuana policies for Washington state college campuses. Now that the CWU SSDP chapter is up and running, he hopes to establish a campus medical marijuana policy that would provide protection for students who are medical cannabis patients.

University of Florida - Gainesville, FL (Southern Region)
Chase Corbin got connected to us in November when he was looking for drug policy internship opportunities, he noticed SSDP was mentioned on the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) and Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) websites and decided to check us out. Chase hopes to make an impact on campus with his chapter by facilitating professional and evidence based discussions about drug policy. Currently a University Scholar at UF majoring in philosophy & economics, he hopes to attend law school then pursue a career in drug policy reform after completing his studies as an undergrad.

Students for Sensible Drug Policy is active across the United States with official chapters at over 150 high schools, colleges, universities, graduate & law schools. Visit our website to join or start one at your school today, and to access our activist resources including our comprehensive Student Organizing Manual.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Chapter Leader of the Week: Trevor Hosterman, West Chester University

Trevor Hosterman
From left: Josh Merer, Trevor Hosterman, Former Gov. Gary Johnson, Zach Hartshorne

Basics:

  • Name: Trevor Hosterman
  • Position: Co-founder/President, WCU SSDP
  • School: West Chester University
  • Major: Political Science
  • Location: West Chester, PA

SSDP: When did you 1st get involved with SSDP?
Trevor: I first got involved with SSDP in the fall of 2009 when my cofounder, Josh Merer, and I decided we wanted to make a change on our campus and in our community when it came to drug policy and harm reduction.

SSDP: What has been your favorite SSDP experience?
Trevor: My whole experience with SSDP has been remarkable. From conferences to camping trips, everything has been amazing. One of my favorite experience as a chapter was when we had the opportunity to host the former Governor of New Mexico, Gary Johnson.

SSDP: What issues are most important for your chapter?
Trevor: Right now one of the biggest issues we're looking into as a chapter is how to get our school to adopt a medical amnesty policy. They told us they won't do anything until the state does something first. So as a chapter we want to make sure our state representatives reintroduce SB 488 this year. SB 488 called for state wide medical amnesty in cases of alcohol poisoning.

SSDP: Do you have any events planned for the this semester?
Trevor: We sure do! We're kicking off the semester with a show at a local venue with Roots of Creation headlining on February 5. In the works we have a lobby day at the capital, a camping trip and we have a couple more things in the works.

SSDP: What do you like best about being part of SSDP?
Trevor: The wonderful, passionate friends I have met along the way.

SSDP: Any fun facts about you?
Trevor: I love concerts. I think I went to about sixty or so in 2010. You might also say I'm a fan of the great outdoors.

SSDP: Do you have any advice for other chapter leaders?
Trevor: Keep going what you're doing. Positive thought yields positive action.

Connect with the West Chester University SSDP chapter on Facebook & Twitter.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Marijuana Prohibition to Blame in Shooting Death of UMD Student

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 14, 2011
CONTACT: Stacia Cosner, SSDP National Associate Director – (410) 299-3433
Lauren Mendelsohn, UMD SSDP (202) 596-7737

Marijuana Prohibition to Blame in Shooting Death of University of Maryland Student
UMD student group says legalization will end drug war violence

College Park, MD. – Officials at Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) charged today that the murder of UMD student Justin DeSha-Overcash on Tuesday is a result of marijuana prohibition policies that actually put young people in more danger than a system of legalization and regulation. DeSha-Overcash, 22 years-old, had a bright future ahead and was slated to graduate in June with a degree in physics and astronomy.

“This isn’t simply a drug related crime as the media is calling it,” explained Stacia Cosner, Associate Director at SSDP. “This is drug-prohibition related violence. We don’t see students shooting one another over alcohol, because it’s legal and there are no black market profits worth protecting.”

SSDP is joining DeSha-Overcash’s friends and family in criticizing Prince George's County Police for placing the blame on the victim, labeling him as a drug dealer simply because marijuana was found at the home.

"As Justin’s friends and family mourn their loss, SSDP members extend their support by emphasizing a positive and fair characterization of his life," said Cosner. "On top of his ambitious schoolwork, he also worked as a teaching assistant and at the campus observatory. He was not simply a drug dealer whose death could somehow be justified by the presence of marijuana in his home as police have suggested."

Lauren Mendelsohn, a member of the UMD chapter of SSDP, expressed her concern about law enforcement’s stated priorities in response to the murder. "A young man lost his life, tragically and with the killer still on the loose. The College Park community is seeking support and assurance that the killer will be brought to justice, but the Prince George's County Police blaming the victim is incredibly concerning. It raises serious questions about their priorities.”

“Police need to start looking at the policies surrounding drugs and evaluating the unintended consequences of prohibition. If marijuana were regulated in a similar way to alcohol, perhaps Justin would still be alive today," says Cosner.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Win Tickets to Slightly Stoopid's Winter Tour!


Slightly Stoopid is one of the many artists on SSDP's AMPLIFY Project that is bringing SSDP tables to most of their shows on their Spring tour. To help spread the word about the work that SSDP does, the band is offering the chance for anyone who signs up on SSDP's action alert list to win 2 free tickets to these upcoming shows:

DATEVENUECITYTICKETSRSVP
FEB. 04, 2011TPC BIRD'S NESTSCOTTSDALE, AZTICKETS
FEB. 16, 20119:30 CLUBWASHINGTON, DCTICKETS
FEB. 17, 20119:30 CLUBWASHINGTON, DCTICKETS
FEB. 18, 2011LUPO'S ON THE STRANDPROVIDENCE, RITICKETS
FEB. 19, 2011HAMMERSTEIN BALLROOMNEW YORK, NYTICKETS
FEB. 20, 2011HOUSE OF BLUESATLANTIC CITY, NJTICKETS
FEB. 24, 2011ORBIT ROOMGRAND RAPIDS, MITICKETS
FEB. 25, 2011MADISON THEATERCOVINGTON, KYTICKETS
FEB. 26, 2011CANNERY BALLROOMNASHVILLE, TNTICKETS
FEB. 27, 2011AMOS' SOUTHENDCHARLOTTE, NCTICKETS
MAR. 01, 2011THE NORVANORFOLK, VATICKETS
MAR. 02, 2011THE MUSIC FARMCHARLESTON, SCTICKETS
MAR. 03, 2011JANNUS LIVEST. PETERSBURG, FLTICKETS
MAR. 04, 2011JANNUS LIVEST. PETERSBURG, FLTICKETS
MAR. 05, 2011PLUSHJACKSONVILLE, FLTICKETS
MAR. 12, 20119 MILE MUSIC FESTIVALMIAMI, FLTICKETS
MAY 29, 2011HOOKAVILLETHORNVILLE, OHTICKETS

*Festival tickets are not included in the contest. 

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

SSDP to Co-Sponsor Series on California's Criminal Justice System at Golden Gate University

A Critical Eye on Criminal Justice

A Critical Eye on Criminal Justice

The students of Golden Gate Law School’s American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) are proud to host a series of panels designed to educate, inform, and reflect on California's criminal justice system. We encourage your attendance to provide insight and speak with others concerning California's criminal justice system. Please see below for more information about each panel:
Week 1: Psychology & Law
Tuesday, January 18 11:45 AM – 1:00 PM
Guest Panelists:
  • Craig Haney, Professor of Psychology at University of Santa Cruz and expert in effects of incarceration
  • Sara Norman, Managing attorney of the Prison Law Office
  • Moderated by Professor Susan Rutberg
Week 2: Foundations of the Criminal Justice System
Wednesday, January 26 12:00 – 1:00 PM
Guest Panelists:
  • James Bell, Founder and Executive Director of the W. Haywood Burns Institute
  • Diana Tate Vermeire, Racial Justice Project Director at the ACLU of Northern California
  • Dorsey Nunn, Executive Director of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and co–founder of All of Us or None
Week 3: Life in a California Prison
Tuesday, February 1 5:00 – 6:30 PM
Guest Panelists:
  • Donald Specter, Director of the Prison Law Office
  • Jeanne Woodford, Former warden, San Quentin State Prison
  • Paul Wright, Editor and co-founder of Prison Legal News
  • Moderated by Professor Mort Cohen
Week 4: Examining Alternative Movements in Prison Reform
Thursday, February 10 12:00 – 1:00 PM
Guest Panelists:
  • Judge Jeffery Tauber, Judge in Oakland Municipal Court
  • George Galvis, Educator, consultant, trainer, and speaker in the areas of youth development & organizing, violence prevention, and restorative justice for youth
  • Cynthia Chandler, Co-Founder and Executive Director of Justice Now
We hope you will join us in this critical discussion of criminal justice in the midst of historical reform. Thank you for your support. For more information visit our Facebook page or contact: John Robinson at johnbrobinson2@gmail.com or Pouria Yazdi at pouriayazdi@gmail.com. All panels will be held at 536 Mission Street, 2nd Floor Room 2203, San Francisco.
A Critical Eye on Criminal Justice
A Critical Eye on Criminal Justice

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Intern with SSDP!

Join SSDP's National Staff as an Intern! *Warning: you may get pied.

It's the beginning of the Spring semester and many students will need to have internships. Why go the usual route of making copies and fetching coffee when you can intern with SSDP and help change drug policy!

We have some great opportunities available in both our Washington, D.C. and San Francisco offices.

Graphic Design Intern
Washington, DC or San Francisco, CA
Graphic Design Intern / Hourly
Unpaid, with class credit available
Starts:
 Monday 17, January 2011

Membership Coordination Fellow
Washington, DC or San Francisco, CA
Membership Coordination Fellow / HourlyUnpaid, class credit available
Starts: Monday 17, January 2011

Social Media Intern
Washington, DC or San Francisco, CA
Social Media Intern / Hourly
Unpaid, with class credit available
Starts: Monday 17, January 2011

Web Team Intern
Washington, DC or San Francisco, CA
Web Team Intern / Hourly
Unpaid, with class credit available
Starts: Monday 17, January 2011

Come join the SSDP team for an amazing experience working in drug policy reform. Apply today!


*Applications are accepted on a rolling basis and start times are flexible.

Human Rights and Harm Reduction: The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child

YouthRISE and the International Harm Reduction Association (IHRA) have partnered to produce a document on Human Rights and Harm Reduction from a child's legal perspective. A focus on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) gives the authors opportunity to discuss what children's rights may be violated when states attempt to protect them from illicit drug use.

The authors identify that Article 33 of the CRC is the only UN human rights treaty to deal with drug use and children. Protection from drugs for children must come with an "appropriate" response by the government. The YouthRISE/IHRA document lays out the text of the article and attempts to parse the meaning of "appropriate." The authors define and delimit the word by making it conform to types of action legally circumscribed by human rights law.

For example, the authors place appropriate within the context of the CRC's article 3, that is a stipulation of what makes the best interests of the child. It then reasons through the ways in which drug policy is often not in the best interests of the child. Or, put differently, that drug policy as currently conducted is often not appropriate to protect the child, or reduce harm.

The document is limited by its length so cannot withstand much criticism. It's a welcome first stab at trying to understand how to use international law, in this case human rights law for children, to fight back against irrational official drug policies, such as the drug war. But the document's authors offer little urgency in their task, a problem constructed by a populist methodology that goes in search of youth issues rather than the zones of conflict where the human rights violations actually occur. Since one of these conflict zones is Mexico, with 31,000 dead in the drug war, news organizations estimate 51,000 orphans, with a large number in Juarez. This is too big a problem to collapse into larger "issues."

And few in the human rights community have yet to define what is appropriate to protect the Mexican drug war orphans from greater harm. Juarez is, after all, the most dangerous city in the world.

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Action Required: Sign A Petition to Retain Evidence-based Practices in Hungary's Drug Policy

The European Union continues to register deep divisions in drug policy. On the one hand there's Portugal, scion of the progressive movement, a country that offers treatment over incarceration for small amounts of possession. And on the other hand there's Hungary, where years of progressive organizing around drug issues may have just evaporated, returning instead to the bete noire of prohibition.

Hungary's anti-prohibitionist drug reformers and harm reductionists need the help of SSDP's members. Why? and How?

The how's the easy part, at least if you have a computer. Just sign this petition composed by non-governmental organizations to the Hungarian government urging them to retain evidence-based drug policy.

The petition is urgent. Just as the Hungarian Government took over the presidency of the European Union in 2011, it decided to engage in some major revisions to a drug policy program convened and produced by its predecessor, which it removed from office in elections held in April 2010. Many of these changes by the new government actually conflict with stated policies of the European Union they are meant to be heading. According to Drug Reporter, the news service of the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, the current Hungarian Government has turned its back on harm reduction and human rights, perhaps to save money in a tight fiscal year. The government abolished the National Drug Prevention Institute, fired the national drug coordinator, and stripped the drugs budget. It's plaint? That the policy was too focused on "drug liberalization and harm reduction." Or, in no uncertain terms, evidence-based practices needed to go.

The actions against scientific policy have struck a blow against Hungary's drug reformers in non-governmental organizations. The previous government had opened up a broad consultative process for empirical drug policy and practices. It included all the major national and international actors whose opinion was sought on how best to prevent or treat addiction. The consultation process produced an eight year policy document for 2010 - 2018. And even though at one point the current government signaled its intention to keep the policy moving forward, by December 2010 it produced the current crisis by axing the stated policy. In the text of the petition, the NGO's denounce the changes on the basis of the harm they will cause:

We emphasize that the lack of an effectively operating drug strategy with adequate financial resources and professional support undermines prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and harm reduction services – as a consequence harms can be measured not only in money but in human lives
.

Now, you can take action by signing the petition to keep science in Hungary's drug policy, here.

Monday, January 03, 2011

Wikileaks: Suspending Mexico's Constitution, Costs Appear High

Recently Wikileaks released a secret cable of 28 October 2009 from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City to a variety of U.S. Government departments in Washington. In the cable, a diplomat depicted and described Mexican Defense Secretary Galvan's attempt to convince other U.S. diplomats and his Mexican cabinet colleagues to introduce martial law in Mexico, in places where violence over drug trafficking has taken hold. The document exposes how high level Mexican government officials -- a supportive Defense Minister and lukewarm Interior Minister -- argued over suspending fundamental constitutional guarantees such as freedom of assembly and the press to combat drug trafficking organizations (DTOs).

But the document also reveals a U.S. diplomat hard at work, being realistic about the tactics of Mexico's drug war, and savvy to the country's fraught constitutional history of dealing with public order through constitutional suspensions and public oversight.

And yet even so, the diplomat suggests that while suspending the constitution is a non-starter, there are less controversial ways to expand Mexico's presidential authority over the armed forces during peacetime with a bill currently before Congress.

The diplomat briefed the U.S. government on the Mexican response to the Defense Secretary's desire to suspend certain Constitutional provisions. Defense Minister Galvan lobbied members of the Mexican government, including a reluctant Interior Minister Gomez Mont, for suspension using a multi-pronged argument.

The case the Defense Secretary built rested upon exigent circumstances; these included Juarez's daily murder rate, and the escalating violence amidst the drug trafficking organizations and government forces. The Defense Secretary suggested the urgency of his task in that current supreme court jurisprudence did not cover the military's police function as pacifiers. So, to make a case for constitutional suspension, thereby legitimizing the military's current police work, the Defense Secretary wanted to invoke Article 29 of the Mexican Constitution.

Here's the English text of the Mexican law that allows for suspension of the country's constitutional guarantees. Article 29 of the Mexican Constitution of 1917 reads:

In the event of invasion, serious disturbance of the public peace, or any other event which may place society in great danger or conflict, only the President of the Mexican Republic, with the consent of the Council of Ministers and with the approval of the Federal Congress, and during adjournments of the latter, of the Permanent Committee, may suspend throughout the country or in a determined place the guarantees which present an obstacle to a rapid and ready combatting of the situation; but he must do so for a limited time, by means of general preventive measures without such suspensions being limited to a specified individual.

Interior Minister Gomez Mont, who did not favor suspension, still insisted to U.S. diplomats that it was not martial law "in the way that you know it" and was designed to respond to the increasing violence in the country. The final part of the Constitutional Article placed Congress in charge of continuous review, in or out of session.

One of the remarkable things about the Wikileak cable is the judicious weighing of different forms of evidence employed by the diplomat. The diplomat states that Mexico rarely in the twentieth century suspended the Constititution. Indeed, the diplomat suggested that suspension did not occur during the 1968 student protests, the 1985 earthquake, the EZLN Rebellion in Chiapas, or the 1996 protests in Oaxaca. If these crises did not meet the level of suspension, how could it pass public muster now, he asked? It wouldn't, the diplomat responded. And if it failed it would further limit President Calderon's credibility. International and human rights groups had already offered legitimate critics of the military's policing of certain municipalities, and suspension would, these critics alleged, worsen the human rights record.

But in describing the situation neither is the U.S. diplomat a benign force. In the composition of this classified cable, he did not fail to point out that the Mexican government had better options on the table than suspension of Article 29. If Article 29 was a political gamble, pushing through legislation on national security that expands the president's powers over the military, and to designate them as a tool for law and order in regards intelligence gathering, could be seen as necessary for enforcement. The diplomat is careful to point out the benefits of this approach, but also describes significant hostility to any of Calderon's reforms among high-ranking members of the opposition.

The cable ends with a summing up of the issue: Article 29 would not enrich current strategy. Instead, it should be seen as an attempt by Mexico's defense community to protect themselves from human rights or other litigation. Indeed, in a notable coincidence, Wikileaks released this cable just as the Inter American Court of Human Rights, ruled against the government in Mexico in a case in which military officials investigated military members who had abused civilian environmental activists. The IACHR declared that Mexico must turn over military to civilian authorities in cases of civilian jurisdiction. Even so, the Government's subsequent sending of legislation purporting to effectuate this reform has already been declared stillborn by the major human rights organizations, such as Human Rights Watch. The rumblings from the Defense Secretary suggest that the Mexican military considers itself in a precarious position.