The Need for Intersectionality in Harm Reduction and Gender-Based Violence Edited by:Angela Dwyer, PhD, University of Tasmania, AustraliaPranee Liamputtong, PhD, College of Health Sciences, VinUniversity, VietnamTony Rossi, PhD, Western Sydney University, AustraliaAlex Workman, MRes, Western Sydney...
Tony Rossi,PhD, Western Sydney University, Australia Alex Workman,MRes, Western Sydney University, Australia Submission Status: Open until 26 May 2025 Aims and Scope TheHarm Reduction Journalis an open access, peer-reviewed journal that publishes research and commentary on approaches diminishing the h...
Midford, R., Acres, J., Lenton, S., Loxley, W., Boots, K. (2002). Cops, drugs and the community: Establishing consultative harm reduction structures in two Western Australian locations. International Journal of Drug Policy, 13(3), 181-188....
The School Health and Alcohol Harm Reduction Project (SHAHRP) is a four-year longitudinal, intervention research study currently being conducted in 14 high schools in Perth, Western Australia, involving over 2300 intervention and control students. The aim of the study is to provide students with ...
Harm Reduction Journal volume 20, Article number: 91 (2023) Cite this article 3004 Accesses 3 Citations 1 Altmetric Metrics details Abstract Background Supported accommodation intends to address challenges arising following release from prison; however, impact of services, and of specific service ...
Harm reduction in Australia: some problems putting policy into practice it aims to reduce harm to the community by reducing harm to drug users and more generally to reduce drug use, but the precise meaning of the policy ... D Wellbourne-Wood - 《International Journal of Drug Policy》 被引...
the first harm-reduction programs were implemented in the Western world. This paper is a literature review describing four forms of harm reduction currently in use in Europe, North America, and Australia. Each represents a reasonable counterapproach to the threat of increased prevalence of HIV among...
This article examines harm reduction from a novel perspective. Its central thesis is that harm reduction is not only a social concept, but also a biological one. More specifically, evolution does not make moral distinctions in the selection process, but
In this context, evidence is relied upon as a tool to de-politicise and de-moralise harm reduction debates. Yet the potential of evidence to affect deeply held views is called into question: can evidence sway individuals from their existing moral positions, so as to “neutralise” morality?
The “gateway hypothesis” usually refers to the possibility that the taking up of habit A, which is considered harmless (or less harmful), may lead to the subsequent taking up of another habit, B, which is considered harmful (or more harmful). Possible