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November 1, 2017

Very excited for (not-so) new endeavor at OSU Moritz College of Law with creation of new Drug Enforcement and Policy Center (DEPC)

Images (1)Regular readers know that I often write about a range of drug enforcement and policy issues in this space and elsewhere, so I doubt anyone will be too surprised to read about this exciting new chapter for my work in this arena via this Ohio State University press release:

The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law announced today that it will establish the Drug Enforcement and Policy Center (DEPC) with funding provided by a $4.5 million gift from the Charles Koch Foundation.

The DEPC will support and promote interdisciplinary research, scholarship, education, community outreach and public engagement on the societal impacts surrounding legal reforms that prohibit or regulate the use and distribution of traditionally illicit drugs. Robert J. Watkins/Procter & Gamble Professor of Law Douglas A. Berman will lead the center, which will draw on institutional expertise from the Moritz College of Law, John Glenn College of Public Affairs, College of Social Work and across the university to examine the impact of modern drug laws, policies and enforcement on personal freedoms.

“The Drug Enforcement and Policy Center will serve as an objective, reputable voice in the national conversation relating to drug laws and enforcement,” said Moritz College of Law Dean Alan C. Michaels. “Doug is the perfect person to lead this interdisciplinary endeavor as we build on our strengths at the law school -- and comprehensively across Ohio State -- with research and outreach activities that will provide critical evidence to help inform policy decisions at the local, state and national levels.”

The DEPC will foster collaboration among Ohio State’s nationally recognized faculty in the areas of criminal law, public affairs, legislative reform, community well-being, economic development and social justice to explore how the “war on drugs” and other drug enforcement policies have affected Americans over the past half-century and possibilities for reform and improvement. It will also serve as an independent and reliable source for researchers, policymakers, the media and others interested in objective information about drug enforcement and reform, including rigorous examination of ongoing efforts by many states to replace blanket marijuana prohibition with various legalization and regulatory systems and rules.

“I am honored to serve as the first executive director of the Drug Enforcement and Policy Center as we begin important work across a breadth of critical topics at a time when leaders of all political beliefs are looking for reliable and objective evidence concerning the impact of modern drug policies and practices,” Berman said.

Cross-posted at Marijuana Law, Policy and Reform

November 1, 2017 at 11:02 AM | Permalink

Comments

This has potential as a good resource. I hope Prof. Berman will take his scholarly duty seriously. It is to present all sides of a subject, to allow the users to think about all information.

I hope it will not be a Koch Brothers driven propaganda outlet to empty the prisons. Their aim is to lower taxes on themselves, and to dump the burden of criminality on poor neighborhoods.

Posted by: David Behar | Nov 1, 2017 11:21:27 AM

So this is the booby prize when one gets passed over for a federal judgeship....

Posted by: Dnaiel | Nov 1, 2017 1:19:26 PM

Congratulations - This announcement brightens my day.

Posted by: beth | Nov 1, 2017 1:34:19 PM

‼️CONGRATS‼️

To me , RESEARCH is an extremely important component •
What ARE the long term effect of TCH & CBD ?
How about those mushrooms ?

Posted by: My friend , Docile (now in OR) | Nov 1, 2017 3:16:49 PM

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