Skip to main content

Digital Library

Displaying 16 - 20 of 24 results

  • Integrating a gender approach into police-public partnerships

    This fact sheet, published by the Gender Section of the OSCE Secretariat, shows linkages between police-public partnerships and gender considerations. It aims at providing OSCE police advisers, their implementing partners and other relevant staff with an introduction to the basic knowledge of mainstreaming gender in community policing.

  • Final Report on OSCE Expert Conference on International Co-operation to Combat Trafficking in Illicit Drugs and Chemical Precursors

    This report, produced by the SPMU, provides an overview of the sessions of the Conference that took place in Vienna on 17-18 July 2008 as well as recommendations by the participants. The primary goal of this conference was to identify a potential role for the OSCE in assisting participating States to combating illicit trafficking in drugs and chemical precursors.

  • Convention against the Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances

    This Convention provides comprehensive measures against drug trafficking, including provisions against money laundering and the diversion of precursor chemicals. It provides for international cooperation through, for example, extradition of drug traffickers, controlled deliveries and transfer of proceedings.

  • Convention on Psychotropic Substances

    The Convention establishes an international control system for psychotropic substances. It responded to the diversification and expansion of the spectrum of drugs of abuse and introduced controls over a number of synthetic drugs according to their abuse potential on the one hand and their therapeutic value on the other.

  • Good Practices in Building Police-Public Partnerships by the Senior Police Adviser to the OSCE Secretary General

    The aim of “Good Practices in Building Police-Public Partnerships” is draw together the common basic principles and characteristics of current concepts of community policing applied in the OSCE area and to reflect basic questions of what community policing is and what it is not. This book builds on the “Guidebook on Democratic Policing” and further illustrates the aspects of community policing, touched on in it. This is the Volume 4 in the OSCE Publication Series.