Drug Policy Education Group, Inc. (DPEG)
  P O Box 682, Fayetteville AR 72702
 479-839-2475 <> email:
dpeg@mindspring.com
 
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This Website and materials hereon are provided as a public service of Drug Policy Education Group, Inc.
Working in Arkansas since 1999 to reduce the harm caused by drugs and by failed drug policies.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Arkansas Libraries Project

[Book List]
"Books, articles, and videos available at your local Arkansas library"

 

Delbert O. Lewis was one of tens of thousands of American children stricken by infantile polio myelitis before improved hygiene and vaccinations all but eradicated the terrible disease. His legs and, to a lesser extent, his arms were frozen at a child’s size. His life was lived from a wheelchair until his mid-forties, when the ravages of post-polio syndrome trapped him increasingly in his bed. He died in 2001 unexpectedly from complications of treatment for diabetes.

There was nothing wrong with Del’s mind, however, and he pursued his education and a career in public service. His voracious appetite for learning led him to advocacy on behalf of all persons with disabilities. His work on accessibility resulted in improved handicap parking, ramp incline, and many other features of public property that previously had constituted an impossible barrier to those who could not walk or climb stairs.

Drug policy advocacy was Del’s last cause, which he embraced with his characteristic energy and intense curiosity. He was among the first to join efforts to allow legal medical use of marijuana in Arkansas, having learned from experience that this natural substance was an effective medication for him in relieving the pain and muscle spasm produced by post-polio syndrome. From his bed, surrounded by books, television, and computer, Del pored over research supporting reform and made information available to fellow reformers any way he could.

Delbert O. Lewis explored the extensive literature of drug policy and drug research books. It was his dream that copies of such materials would be made available to the public. In a difficult journey a year before his death, he joined representatives of Drug Policy Education Group to visit Little Rock’s Main Library to assist in donating a few books.

 Those of us who worked with Delbert found him difficult at times, but remarkably dedicated to his work. He never failed to unearth new bits of important information, new pathways to action, new ideas for projects. With pride in his role among the growing group of drug policy reformers in Arkansas, Delbert encouraged the organization to expand its outreach by providing tools of learning to the people of the state. His review of the literature served as an important guide in our determination of a final selection for the first year of this project.

 And so we proudly launch the Delbert O. Lewis Memorial Library Project, providing an assortment of materials to each of Arkansas’ regional library systems, the libraries of all its main cities, and the libraries of its colleges and universities. In all, 52 libraries will receive a collection of seven books, a video, eleven booklets, and four articles. With the first round of 2002 paid for by a generous grant from the Tides Foundation, with a project grant from Marijuana Policy Project, and supplemented by donations by Common Sense for Drug Policy, Drug Policy Alliance, and the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation and by contributions from Arkansas people, the Delbert O. Lewis Memorial Library Project will hopefully continue in future years, adding more and more items to the collections, so that citizens in any corner of the state can learn what they want to know about drugs and more effective and humane drug policies.

Books:

Lies, Damned Lies, and Drug War Statistics: A Critical Analysis of Claims Made by the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Matthew B. Robinson and Renee G. Scherlen; 2007: State University of New York 2007 donation

An Analytic Assessment of U. S. Drug Policy, by  David Boyum and Peter Reuter; 2005: AEI Press

Why the Drug War Has Failed and What We Can Do About It: A Judicial Indictment of the War on Drugs,  Judge James P. Gray; 2001: Temple University Press.

Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts, Lynn Zimmer, PhD & John Morgan, MD; 1997: Lindesmith Center.

Cannabis in Medical Practice: A Legal, Historical, & Pharmacological Overview of the Therapeutic Use of Marijuana, Mary Lynn Mathre,  Editor; 1997: McFarland & Company: Jefferson, NC

Is Marijuana the Right Medicine for You? – A Factual Guide to Medical Uses of Marijuana, Bill Zimmerman et al; 1998: McGraw Hill – NTC.

The Marijuana Conviction: A History of Marijuana Prohibition in the United States, Richard J. Bonnie & Charles H. Whitebread; 1974:  The University Press: Charlottesville VA.     

Shattered Lives: Portraits from America’s Drug War, Mikki Norris et al;  1998: Xpressions.

Drug Crazy: How We Got Into This Mess and How We Can Get Out, Mike Gray; 2000: Routledge.

Drug War Facts, 4th Edition; Douglas A. McVay, Editor; Common Sense for Drug Policy 2004.

 Prescription Pot: A Leading Advocate's Heroic Battle to Legalize Medical Marijuana; George McMahon and Christopher Largen, New Horizon Press 2003

Legalize This! The case for decriminalizing drugs; a book by Donald Husak. A Practical Ethics Series edited by Colin McGinn. 2002. Verso: New York.

Video:

“Illegal Healthcare: Medical Marijuana and Arkansas,” 2002: Drug Policy Education Group, Inc.     

 "Hemp and the Rule of Law," a 2004 documentary film (55 minutes – DVD) by Kevin Balling and produced by Tin Roof Video.

"Busted! A Citizen's Guide for Surviving Police Encounters," a 45-minute instructional video by Flex Your Rights Foundation, 2005.

"Speaker Presentations by Members of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), 12-minutes 2005.

Booklets:

Drug Testing– A Bad Investment, ACLU 1999

Drug War Facts: A compilation of useful facts with citations from authoritative sources, Douglas McVay, Editor; 5th Edition, 2006, Common Sense for Drug Policy  

Safety First: A Reality-Based Approach to Teens, Drugs, & Drug Education Marsha Rosenbaum, PhD.; 1999 The Lindesmith Center

Heroin Maintenance, Heroin Overdose, Cocaine and Pregnancy, Methadone Maintenance, Syringe Availability, About Methadone,and Safer Injection Rooms, Staff Publications, Lindesmith Center

“The Education Issue,” ReconsiDer Quarterly Winter 2001-02;  ReconsiDer, 205 Onondaga Avenue, Syracuse, NY.

 "Making Sense of Student Drug Testing: Why Educators Are Saying No," a 28 page booklet published in 2005 by Drug Policy Alliance, New York.

 Article Reprints:

“U.S. Drug Policy: Failure at Home” by Eric Sterling. Foreign Policy in Focus Nov. 1999; Interhemispheric Resource Center and Institute for Policy Studies; POB 4506, Albuquerque NM.

“Rethinking the War on Drugs from a Quaker Perspective,” by Eric Sterling,  Friendly Fire Spring 2000; reprinted by Criminal Justice Policy Foundation:  Washington DC.

“A Crime Prevention Vision,” by Eric Sterling, CJPF

On Balance, a newsletter of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation.

"Going to Pot: The growing movement toward ending America's irrational marijuana prohibition," by Ethan Nadelmann, National Review July 12, 2004.

 

© 2005-06 Drug Policy Education Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
DPEG, Inc., is recognized by the IRS as a full-status 501(c)(3) charitable educational organization.  All contributions to DPEG are tax deductible and confidential.
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