Answered By: Bobray Bordelon Last Updated: Jun 12, 2024 Views: 303
Answered By: Bobray Bordelon
Last Updated: Jun 12, 2024 Views: 303
- The Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics
- Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) Program/Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) Series
- Designed to estimate the prevalence of drug use among persons in the United States who are arrested and booked, and to detect changes in trends in drug use among this population.
- Data are restricted; procedures to apply for access can be found through the site.
- World Drug Report published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime monitors crops.
- Provides detailed estimates and trends on production, trafficking and consumption in the opium/heroin, coca/cocaine, cannabis and amphetamine-type stimulants markets. It includes statistics on seizures, production, consumption, and prices.
- Havoscope: Global Black Market Information had prices from news sources on cocaine, ecstasy pills, heroin, marijuana, and meth. Discontinued in 2022. Pointing to Wayback Time Machine version.
- United States Drug Administration. Data and Statistics.
- Crime Statistics Australia. Illicit Drug Data Report.
- Afghanistan Opium Price Data (1997-2009)
- Hectares Coca 2001-2010 (Colombia)
- Drug consumption, collected online March 2011 to March 2012, English-speaking countries
Survey of respondents aged 18+ from English-speaking countries concerning their personality attributes, demographic information, and their use of legal and illegal drugs. Twelve personality attributes were measured by questionnaires including the NEO-FFI-R (neuroticism, extraversion, openness to experience, agreeableness, and conscientiousness), BIS-11 (impulsivity), and ImpSS (sensation seeking). Participants were questioned regarding their use of 18 legal and illegal drugs (alcohol, amphetamines, amyl nitrite, benzodiazepine, cannabis, chocolate, cocaine, caffeine, crack, ecstasy, heroin, ketamine, legal highs, LSD, methadone, mushrooms, nicotine, and volatile substance abuse) and one fictitious drug (Semeron) which was used to identify over-claimers. Demographic variables include level of education, age, gender, country of residence, and ethnicity. - See the Cannabis NewsBank Research Edition for access to cannabis industry news, information, and archives.
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