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Search results on "DRUG TRAFFICKING CARIBBEAN":

Term Paper # 4395 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Drug Trafficking in the Caribbean, 2001.
The paper discusses the drug problems of the people of the Caribbean and the drug trafficking that goes on there. It also deals with the dangers that drug trafficking causes to other countries and their people.
3,650 words (approx. 14.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 101.95
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Abstract
This paper is about the drug trafficking problems of the Caribbean. The author examines the Caribbean region as a long standing area where illegal substances have been grown and sold. The people are poverty stricken and sell drugs as a means to make money. The author looks into the Caribbean?s climate and location which make it an ideal place to grow and sell drugs. The people are able to transport drugs to other countries through the use of planes, boats, etc. The paper goes on to discuss how this poses as a threat to all countries because it makes drugs available which leads to drug problems for their citizens.

From the paper:

"The Caribbean is known for its agriculturally equipped weather conditions, which makes for most islands to be very fertile. Many farmers in the Caribbean grow drugs as part of their produce to earn more money. They can then sell the illegal substances to islanders, tourists, and then ship the rest off to be sold to other countries? citizens. This poses as a threat to the health of all people who are able to buy drugs as a result of drug trafficking in the Caribbean. It also poses a threat to governments because they have to use their funding on programs to educate citizens about the dangers of drugs as well as rehabilitate those citizens that are addicted to drugs and suffer from drug abuse."
Term Paper # 59438 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
International Drug Trafficking, 2004.
An analysis of the problem of international drug trafficking.
2,848 words (approx. 11.4 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 84.95
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Abstract
This paper describes the extent of the problem of international drug trafficking. The paper analyzes the reasons for drug trafficking and the changing patterns in recent times, presenting an overview of the major drugs being trafficked internationally. The related problem of money laundering through which most of global drug trade is financed is also examined in the paper.

From the Paper
"A number of drugs including cocaine, opiates, cannabis, and synthetic drugs such as MDMA (ecstasy) and methamphetamines are considered illegal in most parts of the world. Declaring a substance illegal, however, does not mean that its use or demand can be eliminated as was so famously experienced in the United States after the alcohol prohibition in the 1920s. It just results in the creation of a black market in which the demand for the banned substances (in this case, illicit drugs) is met by organized criminals. Similarly, the current worldwide demand for illicit drugs is largely met through international drug trafficking-a multi billion dollar cross-border business that links the growers and producers of the illicit drugs with the consumers."
Term Paper # 24979 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Drug Trafficking, 2002.
Discusses the issue of drug trafficking between the USA and Latin America.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 12 sources, $ 79.95
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Abstract
Discusses the issue of drug trafficking between the USA and Latin America. Examines the political ramifications of various governments' drug policies. Economic concerns and factors. History of drug trafficking as a product of the 20th Century. Illegal market. Impact of Prohibition on drug use and transportation. Changing government positions towards the problem.

From the Paper
"Introduction
The United States is currently engaged in a War on Drugs, a war that has been waged for decades and which shows no indication of being successfully concluded in the near future. As with other types of wars, this one has fronts both within the domestic borders as well as in foreign lands, and the war affects the country's economic policy and shapes relationships with numerous foreign powers. The United States military and intelligence services are engaged in the war, as are various law enforcement agencies at the local, state and federal levels. Yet drug use and abuse continues to be strong within the United States, and drug interdiction efforts on the international level draw mixed reviews. This research considers the issue of drug trafficking between Latin America and the United States, and examines the political ..."
Term Paper # 31438 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Terrorism and Drug Trafficking, 2002.
Establishes a link between drug trafficking and the rise of terrorism in America.
1,900 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 8 sources, $ 71.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a detailed analysis of the drug mafia contributing to the enhancement of terrorism in our country. Drug abuse is a huge problem that is growing worse. Thus precautionary measures should be taken in order to control drug trafficking.
Term Paper # 23135 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Drug Trafficking in the United States, 2002.
This paper discusses that one of the most profitable markets in the United States is the illegal trafficking of drugs.
1,735 words (approx. 6.9 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 56.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the background, problems of illegal drugs trafficking and the methods being used to stop the trafficking of drugs in the United States. This paper reveals that money seized in drug stings and received from fines for drug offenders is a billion dollar industry for the American government. The author believes that completely ending the entire drug trafficking business is almost impossible because there are too many loopholes and too much money at stake for both the dealers and the government.

From the Paper
"The largest distributor of drugs, especially cocaine, comes from Columbia. Interagency intelligence assessment statistics say that nearly sixty-five percent of all cocaine goes through the southern borders of the United States. Columbian dealers send the drugs through Mexico, whose laws are not nearly as strict, and the dealers in Mexico bring them across the border. They come through Texas and New Mexico by ground and California by ground, air and seaports."
Term Paper # 104913 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
African-American Women and Drug Trafficking, 2008.
This paper explores the relationship between African-American women and the selling of drugs.
1,180 words (approx. 4.7 pages), 6 sources, APA, $ 40.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses the observation that young African-American women have a higher proclivity to sell drugs than other races such as their young Caucasian counterparts. The paper examines studies that shows this relationship between at risk behaviors and young African-American women. The paper also looks at research that explores how early adolescence affects African-American women later in adulthood insofar as drug-related problems are concerned. The paper discusses a proposed study that will determine the degree to which poverty and economic related circumstances contribute to drug trafficking in a specific urban center among the young African-American female population.

Outline:
Abstract
Introduction
II. Literature Review
III. Methodology

From the Paper
"This research project is designed to identify the primary factors related to the high incidence rate of young African American women who commonly sell drugs or engage in drug trafficking activity in the nation's urban centers. The working hypothesis states that poverty and related economic factors directly impact the study populations' proclivity to engage in drug trafficking as an economic alternative. While this might seem criminally obvious, there are social and cultural implications related to the study outcomes which the criminal justice system must learn to accommodate for such as devising adequate drug treatment programs for repeat offenders that better assess and target the contributing behaviors (Laudet, Cleland, Magura, Vogel & Knight, 2004). "
Term Paper # 24564 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Drug And Arms Trafficking In Afghanistan, 2002.
Analyzes the situation from 1973 to 2001.
4,275 words (approx. 17.1 pages), 33 sources, $ 135.95
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Abstract
Analyzes the situation from 1973 to 2001. Posible solutions to problems created by drug and arms trafficking. Afghanistan black market economy (opium, heroin, arms) related to political & economic devastations. Civil unrest. Soviet invastion. U.S. backed revolt against Soviet rule. Drug eradication efforts. The Taliban. Impact of trafficking on other countries.

From the Paper
"NARCOTICS AND ARMS TRAFFICKING IN AFGHANISTAN

This research paper describes and analyzes drug and arms trafficking in Afghanistan since 1973, places them in historical context, examines their effects outside of Afghanistan and discusses possible remedial solutions to the problems they have created.

Over the past thirty years, Afghanistan has sustained itself largely from the proceeds of a clandestine or black market economy based on the production, processing and export of opium, heroin and other narcotic drugs and the smuggling of arms and other goods. These activities have developed out of the devastation, political fragmentation and economic dislocation produced by nearly thirty years of civil unrest and the Soviet invasion and ten year occupation of Afghanistan (1979-1989), and ..."
Term Paper # 70483 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Drug Use in Zapata, 2006.
A study of drug trafficking and adolescent drug use in Zapata, Texas.
1,610 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 7 sources, APA, $ 55.95
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Abstract
This paper studies drug trafficking and drug use in the border town of Zapata, Texas. The paper fouses on the effect of drugs on the adolescents in the community. Factors examined include school drop out rates and youth involvement with drugs and crime rates. The paper also discusses the lack of services available for adolescents in Zapata.

From the Paper
"The following presents a research paper on the youth or adolescents in Zapata, Texas and surrounding border towns. Specifically, this research addresses the problem of drug trafficking in Zapata and the effect this is..."
Term Paper # 62731 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Domestic Drug Smuggling, 2005.
A discussion of methods of domestic drug trafficking.
1,475 words (approx. 5.9 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 48.95
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Abstract
This paper examines how the illegal drug market in the United States is one of the most profitable in the world and attracts the most sophisticated and aggressive drug traffickers. It describes many methods of trafficking including the use of a collapsible rubber fuel "bladder". It also looks at how the United States Customs Service, an agency of the U. S. Treasury Department, is the primary enforcement agency protecting the United States and the only border agency with extensive air, land and marine interdiction forces and its own intelligence branch.

From the Paper
"The traffic and distribution of illegal drugs involves diverse groups. Criminal groups operating from South America "smuggle cocaine and heroin into the United States via a variety of routes, including land routes through Mexico, maritime routes along Mexico's east and west coasts, sea routes through the Caribbean, and international air corridors." Then there are criminal groups operating in Mexico that smuggle cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, amphetamine, and marijuana across the Southwest Border into the United States for distribution. Aside from the foreign import of drugs, there are domestic organizations that cultivate, produce, manufacture, and distribute illegal drugs such as marijuana, methamphetamine, phencyclidine, PCP, and lysergic acid diethyamide, and LSD."
Term Paper # 22738 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Columbian Drug War, 2002.
A paper which examines the extent to which drug trafficking and terrorism have played a role in Colombia's civil war.
1,009 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 35.95
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Abstract
In 1999, Columbia negotiated a three-year stabilization agreement named "Plan Columbia" with the International Monetary Fund, which established certain policy targets that it had to achieve in order to borrow money. The paper examines that although this money was given to resolve the civil conflict, curb drug trafficking, modernize legal and military institutions and strengthen the economy, in fact most of the money goes to the military in order to fight the FARC rebels who control vast areas of the coca fields. The paper examines the reasons behind the United States' eagerness to aid the Columbian government, despite the fact that most of the money is obviously not being used for "anti-drug" programs.

From the Paper
"However, statistics show that Colombian police and military are not fighting a drug war but rather a civil war against leftwing rebels that are rapidly gaining strength. However, the U.S. is completely aware that the money is not going to drugs and actually has an interest in the civil war because Colombia is strategically located, bordering both the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. In addition, it has plentiful oil and mineral reserves that multinational corporations have been exploiting for years, often under the armed guard of the Colombian military. Therefore, the U.S. is supplying aid in the name of drugs but the money is used to keep control of the territory of Colombia."
Term Paper # 66264 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The History of Drugs in America, 2006.
An analysis of legislative attempts to control drug use and trafficking throughout U.S. history.
2,100 words (approx. 8.4 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 65.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes the history of anti-drug legislation in the U.S., beginning with the Civil War. The author opens with a discussion of the shifts in official and grassroots attitudes toward drug use -- from the Great Awakening period with its Anti-Salon League to the 1970s, when even the Surgeon General appeared 'soft' on cocaine. Then the author examines how education, healthcare and politics have all played a role in drug policy and public opinion on the issue.

From the Paper
"The "Great Awakening" also swept the United States during this period. This movement was a fundamentalist Christian movement that preached drugs and alcohol keep people away from God. This movement was largely confined to rural states and territories led to the creation of the "Anti-Salon League" and the Women's Christian Temperance Movement. Indeed, the push for the abolition of alcohol and drugs was a parallel movement with giving women the right to vote. The Suffrage Movement was started by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. These women thought that most violence against women and children was directly linked to alcohol. Racism also had a hand in the advancement of the Temperance movement. The suspicion and prejudice against the growing immigrant population of the United States fueled fears that the use of Alcoholic beverages by ethnic groups, like Irish-Catholics, Italians, and Germans, was a threat to American society. All of these forces, Suffrage, a population that was addicted to pain medication, and prejudice found a common cause, that was, to remove alcohol and drugs from the United States. Dr. McCauley describes how the "Pure Food and Drug Act," the first anti-drug and alcohol legislation, was pushed through Congress."
Term Paper # 96073 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sex Trafficking of Thai Women, 2007.
An analysis of the history of trafficking of Thai women in the United States and the US government policy with regards to the situation.
6,996 words (approx. 28.0 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 157.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the incidence of sex trafficking of Thai women in the United States. In order to understand how this has come about in the United States, the paper identifies current sex trafficking issues in Thailand and what the US government has done in response. It looks at it particularly from a policy-making perspective, including the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000.

Table of Contents:
Review and Discussion
Background and Overview
Incidence and Factors Contributing to Sex Trafficking in Thailand Today
U.S. Government Responses to Sex Trafficking
Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000
Discussion and Analysis
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Complex problems require complex solutions and it is clear that the United States alone will only be able to do so much in the battle against the enormous international human rights crisis of sex trafficking in children today. Fortunately, the United States as well as more and more members of the international community are recognizing that simply enacting new laws in isolation of more comprehensive solutions will fail to adequately address the insidious problems associated with sex trafficking. According to Mathews (2005), in an attempt to supplement the various legal and political initiatives underway to fight the sex trafficking industry, the United States has sought the assistance of a number of human rights groups and other nongovernmental organizations (Mathews, 2005). For example, Gary Haugen, director of the human rights group, International Justice Mission (IJM), is a former federal prosecutor who uses controversial tactics to infiltrate the underground network of sex trafficking; IJM was recently awarded a million dollar grant from the U.S. government to continue its work (Mathews, 2005)."
Term Paper # 104100 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sex Trafficking, 2008.
This paper is written in the form of a debate that covers both sides of the human sex trafficking issue.
2,005 words (approx. 8.0 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 63.95
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Abstract
This paper presents the opening statement of the debate that human sex trafficking as an accepted part of society and human sex trafficking can be addressed with success in the social order. The author contends that, while the argument suggesting that sex trafficking cannot be addressed effectively in society does have merit, the strength of the argument supporting an end to sex trafficking is supported by greater evidence. The paper concludes that through government intervention, public participation and an aggressive approach to the issue, sex trafficking can be ended in society without question.

Table of Contents:
Introduction
Statement Accepting the Issue
Statement in Opposition
Conclusion

From the Paper
"According to Matthews, the sex trafficking business is supported by conditions in society that are detrimental to human existence (sec. 1). Poverty, homelessness and hunger are only a few of these conditions. These factors serve to support sex trafficking because often times children leave their homes and become part of the sex trafficking trade because they are promised a better life than they presently know. Parents sell their children to sex traffickers in many countries because the prices that are offered will provide food for the remaining siblings. "
Term Paper # 61545 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Human Trafficking, 2005.
A research proposal about human trafficking and a look at international laws which are meant to prevent this phenomenon.
1,267 words (approx. 5.1 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 42.95
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Abstract
The purpose of this research proposal is set forth examples of human trafficking as well as providing an overview of the international law in relation to the trafficking of human beings. Further this work conducts a review of the literature available in relation to trafficking in human beings and specifically that of the trafficking of women. Findings of this study are that the problem in trafficking of human beings is a significant problem in today's global society.

Outline
Objective
Methodology
Findings of the Study in Brief
Recommendations
Literature Review
Conclusion
Bibliography

From the Paper
"Trafficking, debt bondage, forced labor, and other abuse commonly suffered by women during migration from Thailand to Japan, as well as their employment in Japan is stated to "constitute violations of the human rights of the women." Further stated is that "These rights are enumerated in international conventions that Japan and Thailand have acceded to or ratified, thereby committing their governments to take the steps necessary to uphold these rights and to provide redress when violations occur." Discrimination suffered in the two countries is illustrated by the numbers of women who suffer and yet the international obligations of the government to check the facilitation of these crimes by the government officials reflects that discriminatory protection in human rights issues. The violation of prohibiting discrimination in the human rights protection is clearly a violation of the laws set out by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (IPPCR)."
Term Paper # 91988 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Human Trafficking, 2006.
This paper discusses the problem of human trafficking, a new era of slavery.
3,965 words (approx. 15.9 pages), 11 sources, APA, $ 107.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the three basic human trafficking markets, both legal and illegal, are (1) the legitimate or conventional market economies such as restaurants, factories and farms, (2) legitimate domestic service economy such as households maids and (3) the criminal economies of the forced sex industry, mostly prostitution. The author points out that, through deception and empty promises, people and even children are shuttled in secret, often illegally and in frightening conditions, to do work, which no one else will do, to places where they often cannot communicate and are forced to work through threats of violence. The paper relates that there are few resources to help these victims and very limited legal protection in the United States and elsewhere. The paper has many long quotations.

Table of Contents
Introduction
The Face of Human Trafficking
The Economic Side of Trafficking
Legal Issues of Human Trafficking
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Here are just a few statements from women who have been victims of human trafficking and forced prostitution. There are more stories than there are people to write them and more dehumanizing occurrences than most people would even believe. Yet, for the most part the public is not even aware of the situation; even historically, as few people know of the forced prostitution rings that sprang up in the Western United States during the gold rush and even fewer are aware that it happens today, here and all over the world."
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>