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NIDA Drug Library Closed Due to Budget Woes |
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Written by Phillip S. Smith
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Saturday, 04 August 2007 |
The National Institute on Drug Abuse's (NIDA) massive collection of
journals and books related to drug use and addiction has been shut down
because of budget cuts, according to the organ of the Substance Abuse
Librarians and Information Specialists, SALIS News. The fate of the
12,000 journal volumes and 8,000 books in the collection is unclear at
this point, but it will likely be scattered between the National
Institute of Health, other drug and addiction collections, and the
personal libraries of researchers.
While the collection was used primarily by NIDA staff, it also
contains many historic documents. The collection dates back to 1929 and
includes every article published by program staff since NIDA's
predecessor, the Addiction Research Center, was founded in 1935. Also
among the holdings are the entire set of the Committee on Problems of
Drug Dependence meetings abstracts/minutes since its inception in 1929,
and numerous other government documents and materials only found in
such special collections.
NIDA gets over a billion dollars a year to conduct research on
drug abuse and addiction, but it can't seem to find the money to keep
this resource going.
As the SALIS News noted: "What will this mean in the long term for
those who had relied on [the NIDA Library] for the information they
sought? Will it be just a few clicks on Google for them to find the
information? What about the history of this research unit so long a
part of the early drug addiction research in America? And gee, I
thought drug abuse was supposed to be one of the major problems in
America."
* Smith writes for DRC Net, the online news and activism
service supported by donations that publishes the Drug War Chronicles.
To subscribe, visit stopthedrugwar.org
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Phillip S. Smith |
| About the author: |
| Phillip S. Smith is a graduate of the University of South Dakota (BA Political Science, 1979) and the University of Texas at Austin (MA Latin American Studies, 1989), and served as writer and Associate Editor at the magazine Covert Action Quarterly from 1993-1996. Phil has done freelance reporting on Central American and Mexico since the 1980s, and has had articles published in In These Times, Guardian (now defunct), New Politics and many other publications. He is also a long time drug policy activist, having helped to found one of the first NORML chapters in the state of South Dakota. He has been involved in local drug reform efforts in Austin, TX and Washington, DC, including the DC Metro chapter of NORML. |
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 05 August 2007 )
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