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In recent years, the use of illegal substances has increased,
particularly 'designer' drugs which have rapidly become part of
youth culture. The need for all involved in drug control to have up
to date information about the subject has never been greater. This
book helps meet this need by providing a chemical background to the
legal controls on drugs of abuse. Although focussed on the UK, some
of the provisions of the Misuse of Drugs Act derive from
international treaties; the discussion of technical aspects is
therefore of wider relevance. Apart from the Act itself, the book
also deals with certain aspects of the Misuse of Drugs Regulations.
There is detailed coverage of 'designer drugs' and the generic
legislation that was introduced to tackle them. The more recent
addition of 35 'Ecstasy'-like substances is covered in depth. The
significance to the legislation of terms such as salt, base,
stereoisomer, ester, ether, derivative, homologue and isotope are
described, and the text is supplemented by 23 Tables and over 80
chemical structures. There are eleven Appendices covering topics
such as precursor chemicals, related legislation, stated cases,
sentencing guidelines and the chemical characteristics of
commonly-abused drugs. Up-to-date lists of controlled drugs, with
cross references to their status in UN treaties, are provided and a
number of pending and other possible changes to the Act are
included together with a guide to nomenclature and synonyms.
Although primarily aimed at forensic scientists, this book will be
of great benefit to all bodies concerned with drug control,
including the police, customs officers, lawyers and government
departments.
Updating and expanding the coverage of the first Edition, this book
provides a chemical background to domestic and international
controls on substances of misuse. In the United Kingdom,
structure-specific (generic) controls have been further developed
in the past 13 years and now cover 17 groups of compounds. The
focus of those controls has been on new psychoactive substances
(NPS). Since 1997, over 800 NPS have been reported to the European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drugs Addiction. International
generic and analogue controls are described together with a
critical review of their effectiveness. Other, established, drugs
are described as well as a large group of psychoactive substances
that are not scheduled by the International Conventions This book
has general appeal to those needing information on illicit drugs
including forensic scientists, lawyers, law enforcement agencies,
drug regulatory authorities as well as graduate and postgraduate
students of chemistry and the criminal law. The chapters are
supported by chemical structures, numerous tables and charts,
appendices, a glossary and a bibliography. This unique book is a
valuable addition to the literature in this area and will be of
great assistance to those studying this topic.
Integrating Lecture and Lab: A General Biology Laboratory Manual is
designed for biology majors and can be used in conjunction with
many different lower-division biology textbooks. The user-friendly
manual encourages students to think of lecture and lab as a
cohesive unit by requiring them to use the information they are
learning in lecture and the material presented in the manual,
including standard experiments, to complete assignments. Laboratory
topics include prokaryotes, protists, land plants, fungi, animals,
digestion, blood and circulation, reproduction, and the nervous
system. Because classification of organisms can vary among
textbooks, many formal taxa have been eliminated from this manual,
making it usable with a variety of lower division biology texts.
Classroom tested, Integrating Lecture and Lab helps biology
students successfully apply information they learn in their
lectures.
This overview of recent research on how institutions matter in
tackling environmental problems reports the findings and policy
implications of a decade-long international research project.
Studies show that institutions play a role both in causing and in
addressing problems arising from human-environment interactions.
But the nature of this role is complex and not easily described.
This book presents an overview of recent research on how
institutions matter in efforts to tackle such environmental
problems as the loss of biological diversity, the degradation of
forests, and the overarching issue of climate change. Using the
tools of the "new institutionalism" in the social sciences, the
book treats institutions as sets of rights, rules, and
decision-making procedures. Individual chapters present research
findings and examine policy implications regarding questions of
causality, performance, and institutional design as well as the
themes of institutional fit (or misfit), interplay, and scale.
Institutions and Environmental Change is the product of a
decade-long international research project on the Institutional
Dimensions of Global Environmental Change (IDGEC) carried out under
the auspices of the International Human Dimensions Programme. The
book's policy insights demonstrate that research on institutions
can provide the basis for practical advice on effective ways to
deal with the most pressing environmental problems of our times.
Contributors Frank Biermann, Carl Folke, Victor Galaz, Thomas
Gehring, Joyeeta Gupta, Thomas Hahn, Leslie A. King, Ronald B.
Mitchell, Sebastian Oberthur, Per Olsson, Heike Schroeder, Uno
Svedin, Simon Tay, Arild Underdal, Oran R. Young
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