Grantees
Grantees
-
Hungarian Civil Liberties Union
2009
A grant to assist long-term drug policy reform advocacy in Europe by reaching mainstream public opinion through media channels.
-
I Can Live Coalition
2009
A grant to increase both awareness of the youth's role in drug policy development and implementation in Lithuania, and the role of youth itself.
-
Illicit Drug Market
2009
A grant to support the finding of an economic solution to the problem of identifying the best regulatory body to act against the illegal economy.
-
Institute for Policy Studies
2009
A grant to support work on the nexus between domestic politics and international drug policy with an emphasis on mitigating or reversing current US supply reduction policies in places like Colombia, Afghanistan, Mexico and Bolivia.
-
Intercambios
2009
A grant to promote drug policy reform initiatives in Argantina and Latin America.
-
International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS
2009
A grant to support the International Community of Women living with HIV/AIDS, an international network run by and for HIV positive women that promotes all our voices and advocates for changes that improve our lives.
-
International Harm Reduction Association
2009
A grant to make a start at mainstreaming human rights considerations within the drug enforcement activities of United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) through promoting concrete programmatic cooperation between UNODC and Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).
-
Irish Centre for Human Rights
2009
A grant to support the development and expansion of the International Centre on Human Rights and Drug Policy.
-
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
2009
A grant to support the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health in organizing a review meeting for the follow-up of the Lancet Series on HIV Prevention.
-
Keeping the Door Open Society
2009
The purpose of the grant is two-fold: First, the SafeGames 2010 project will use a wide array of outreach and advocacy strategies in assisting visitors and the residents of British Columbia, to celebrate safely and responsibly during the Olympic festivities. Secondly, the project aims to benefit community providers and policy makers by raising international awareness of Vancouver's myriad achievements in harm reduction and drug policy reform, and its role as a global leader in public health innovation.
