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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The duality of drug use and crime represents a long-standing association between two of society's most related – if not undesirable - behaviors. The extent to which criminal behavior and drug use feed off each other in such a way as to synergistically enhance their otherwise individual impact is both grand and far-reaching; that a number of contextual relationships exist to further this duality speaks to external stimuli that serve to exacerbate the problem. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCDrgCrime.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
use feed off each other in such a way as to synergistically enhance their otherwise individual impact is both grand and far-reaching; that a number of contextual relationships exist to
further this duality speaks to external stimuli that serve to exacerbate the problem. 1. It is quite difficult for the most economically
depressed areas of any city to thrive in commerce, a reality that effectively motivates poverty-stricken individuals to move in the direction of lucrative drug dealing. The level of community
support required for legitimate businesses to succeed does not exist within inner cities, which are considered economic ghettos due to their inability to sustain viable existence or cultivate legitimate business
activity. It is most difficult to convince a storeowner that he and his inventory are safe from theft or assault in neighborhoods that boast daily crime activity; rather, that
business owner is going to place his store in a section of town where the percentage of crime is considerable less. To be sure, it is not the entire
inner-city population that poses a threat to economic development, but there are enough individuals whose behavior warrants the caution that paralyzes the entire community. This is when inner cities
begin to influence public policy to such a point that "efforts to reverse drug prohibition face formidable obstacles. Americans have grown accustomed to the status quo" (Nadelmann, 1993, p.
41). Those who endure the struggles inherent to poverty - which is to live below the socially accepted line of decent existence -
typically do not have many of lifes basic necessities, such as enough food, adequate housing or medical care. Because society is fundamentally based upon performance and profit, it is
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