Resumo
Change of format due to the COVID-19 pandemic
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the European Drugs Summer School 2021 will be delivered through online and remote instruction.
The sessions will be also recorded and made available for later viewing.
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Our two week Summer School prepares professionals and students to meet the complex policy challenges that face Europe and the World in the field of drugs. Teaching staff include scientific experts from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), researchers, practitioners and policymakers.
This edition will have a special focus on illicit drugs and vulnerable groups.
We will have daily in-person lectures and group exercises.
Credits and Requirements
The Summer School will give 6 ECTS for their courses.
Students are required to do the assigned readings ahead of time; and − for those who volunteer and/or are selected − to make a short presentation about their research/expertise.
A Multiple Choice Questionnaire (MCQ) will be required at the end of the Summer School, including questions on class content, class discussions and readings. We will issue a Specialised Studies Diploma with the final grade − if the exam is successfully concluded.
Students may also require attendance certificates.
Scholarships
Iscte offers five scholarships covering 50% of the standard fees.
All candidates that submit their application during the 1st phase will be eligible. Scholarships are attributed on the basis of merit (40 %), travel costs (20 %), and the GDP of the candidate's country of residence (40 %).
The University will inform the candidates selected, by email, together with their notification of acceptance.
Make sure to check the Bursaries for Western Balkan students for the 2020 European Drugs Summer School and the Bursaries for students from European Neighbourhood Policy countries for the 2021 European Drugs Winter and Summer Schools.
Cancellation Policy
Deposit and fees will be reimbursed if the summer school is cancelled, which will only happen in case of a insuficient number of participants.
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ECTS
6
Destinatários
- University students (undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate), researchers, professionals and administrators interested in or working in the drugs field, including participants from the EMCDDA's network of focal points in 30 countries, or from programmes being developed by the EMCDDA with third countries (e.g. Western Balkans, North Africa, Eastern Europe).
Requisitos
- Please note that a good command of english is a mandatory requirement
Vagas
- Please note that a good command of english is a mandatory requirement
Vagas
50
Plano Curricular
Equipa docente
Coordenação
Catherine Moury
Associate Professor (with Habilitation)
- NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon
Catherine Moury is Associate Professor (with Habilitation) of Political Science at NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon, Portugal. Her research focuses on comparative politics and institutional change in the European Union. She is the director of the PhD program and is currently the Principal Investigator on a project on Intergenerational Justice. She has published in the American Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of European Public Policy, among others. Her forthcoming book is Capitalising on Constraint: The Politics of Conditionality in Bailed-out Countries during and after the Eurozone Crisis (Manchester University Press).
Marica Ferri
Head of the Support to Practice Sector
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Marica Ferri is the Head of the Support to Practice Sector at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). She is responsible for the Scientific Programme for the European Drugs Summer School since 2015. She holds two Master´s degree, the first in Epidemiology (Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli) and the second in Systematic Reviewing of Scientific Literature in the Biomedical Field University of Milan/University of Oxford. and a PhD in International Public Health (Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Nova University, Lisbon). Since 1994 she has been working as a researcher and methodologist in the field of drug addiction and other medical disciplines.
She has been coordinating the Cochrane Drugs and Alcohol group during five years (1999–2004) and following this, she acted as a methodologist in the development of
several Guidelines at international, national and regional level. She coordinated the implementation phase of those guidelines, including training and assessment. . She taught Masters University courses at the University Statale of Milan, University Bocconi of Milan and Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli and at Telematic University of Rome (UNITELMA)
Lecturers
Alexis Goosdeel
Director
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Mr Goosdeel joined the EMCDDA in 1999 as a project manager in the area of EU enlargement and international relations. From 2005, he headed the agency’s Reitox and international cooperation unit. In this capacity, he played a central role in: coordinating a network of 30 national drug monitoring centres; preparing EU candidate and potential candidate countries for membership of the EMCDDA; developing cooperation with neighbouring countries to the EU; and nurturing relations with countries beyond the Union (Central Asia, Russia, Latin America). Much of his 30-year career working in the field of public health at national, European and international level.
He holds a Master’s degree in clinical psychology and a special diploma in advanced management. He is proficient in six languages: French (mother tongue); English, Spanish, Greek, Portuguese and Dutch. He was born on 7 November 1959 in Brussels.
Alessandra Bo
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Alessandra Bo is a biologist with a master degree in public health from the London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She has been working as a public health specialist in developing countries for both the European Commission and several international organizations. Among several activities, she set up a training course on Field Epidemiology for Sudanese Ministry of Health Officers and assisted an international organization with the final evaluation of a Reproductive Health programme.
In 2008 she joined the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and has been involved in the development and coordination of the EMCDDA Best Practice Portal.
Andrew Cunningham
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Andrew Cunningham joined the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction in Lisbon, Portugal as a Scientific Analyst in Summer 2012. He is currently in the team responsible for the day-to-day running of the European Union's Early warning system for new psychoactive substances.
Andrew is a forensic chemist who started his police career in 1996 when he was appointed Forensic Chemist at the Strathclyde Police Forensic Science Laboratory in Glasgow, Scotland. In 2001, he took charge of the forensic drug laboratory in Glasgow, one of the busiest of such units in the United Kingdom.
From 2004 to 2012 he was employed as the Forensic Science Manager of the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency, the police body with the mandate to tackle organised crime in Scotland. Amongst other tasks, he coordinated a network of Scottish forensic scientists at the forefront of monitoring for the emergence of new drugs.
Anne Bergenstrom
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Anne began her professional career in London, where she worked as Researcher in an academic department at the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine during 1995-1999. From 1999 onwards, she has worked in the field of HIV and harm reduction in international organisations, including in UNAIDS, UNODC and UNICEF in several countries in East Asia and the Pacific, South Asia and South West Asia. In addition, she worked as Project Director and Research Coordinator with the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Health, off-site in northern Vietnam, where she oversaw implementation of a randomised controlled trial aimed at evaluating an HIV prevention intervention among people who inject drugs.
Anne holds a PhD in Health Psychology from University of London (2002) and an MSc in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University College London (2017). Anne relocated from Myanmar to join the EMCDDA in March 2019 to take up the post of Scientific analyst on health in the EU4Monitoring Drugs (EU4MD) project.
Brendan Hughes
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Brendan Hughes has been working at EMCDDA since 2001 in the field of national drug legislation, after gaining a Masters degree in International Criminal Law (LLM) specialising in narcotics law.
He manages the European Legal Database on Drugs (ELDD) which displays “penalties at a glance” for drug use, possession and trafficking laws, and has written various comparative overviews and analyses on different topics such as drug classifications, threshold quantities, alternatives to punishment, drug driving, and control systems for new psychoactive substances. He published the first European quantitative comparison of drug law sentencing and outcome statistics in 2009, followed by the first European qualitative comparison of trafficking scenarios in 2016.
He has advised ministers and parliamentary committees on issues such as decriminalisation, alternatives to punishment and cannabis legalisation, and has authored several articles published in peer-reviewed journals. Brendan Hughes is a British national.
Catherine Moury
Associate Professor (with Habilitation)
- NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon
Catherine Moury is Associate Professor (with Habilitation) of Political Science at NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon, Portugal. Her research focuses on comparative politics and institutional change in the European Union. She is the director of the PhD program and is currently the Principal Investigator on a project on Intergenerational Justice. She has published in the American Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of European Public Policy, among others. Her forthcoming book is Capitalising on Constraint: The Politics of Conditionality in Bailed-out Countries during and after the Eurozone Crisis (Manchester University Press).
Charlotte de Kock
Danilo Ballotta
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Danilo Ballotta (MSc) has been working for the past 20 years in the field of international drug policy. He joined the EMCDDA in 1997, where he worked on legislation, national and European policies and anti-drug coordination systems and has contributed to the agency's work on international drug policy. Since 2005, he has been a principal policy analyst at the EMCDDA, and coordinator of relations with European institutions. In this capacity, he represents the agency in the working group of the Council of Ministers of the European Union (HDG) and in the Strasbourg Council of Europe. Before joining the EMCDDA, Danilo worked at the United Nations Agency against Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and in the European Commission's Working Group on Justice and Home Affairs.
Eva Hoch
Ludwig-Maximilian University
Dr. Eva Hoch is a university lecturer and lead psychologist at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ludwig-Maximilian University, Munich. She is an internationally renowned expert in the field of cannabis. With her research group she developed, tested and translated "CANDIS treatment program for cannabis use disorders" to clinical practice. The evidence-based treatment manual was translated into different languages. In her most recent work, Dr. Hoch focuses also on health benefits of cannabinoids. Other research topics are: New behavioral and e-interventions, treatment practice guidelines, epidemiological studies, randomized-controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta-analysis, international collaboration and networks. Dr. Hoch was honored through several research awards.
Gregor Burkhart
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Since 1996, Gregor Burkhart has been responsible for prevention responses at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction. He has developed databases on best practice examples (EDDRA), evaluation tools (EIB) the Prevention and Evaluation Resource Kit (PERK) and the recently published Prevention profiles on the EMCDDA’s website. His main activities include the development of common European indicators on the implementation of prevention policies in Member States and the promotion of a better and clear understanding of universal, selective, indicated as well as environmental prevention in Europe. Gregor works on methodologies for monitoring prevention responses as well as how to improve and evaluate them.
He is co-founder of the European Society for Prevention Research and holds a doctoral degree in medicine (medical anthropology) on the influence of culture on the classification and perception of body and diseases in the Candomblé cults of Bahia, Brazil as well as an MPH degree from the University of Düsseldorf.
Helena Valente
Kosmicare
Helena Valente began working with people that use drugs in 2004. Helena worked for over 10 years coordinating national and European research and intervention projects in the drugs field. At the moment she is a researcher and Ph.D. Candidate at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences of the Porto University in Portugal and a founding member of Kosmicare association.
Isabelle Giraudon
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Isabelle Giraudon is a scientific analyst on health consequences related to drug use at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).
She is responsible for two of the five key epidemiological indicators monitored by the agency, the 'Drug-related deaths and mortality' and the ‘Drug-related infectious diseases’. This work includes research on morbidity and fatal overdoses, as well as the analysis of all causes of mortality among problem drug users, through European longitudinal cohort studies (including mortality related suicide, trauma, HIV and hepatitis).
She is also involved in other fields of monitoring and analysing drug-related harms, including in particular infectious diseases, acute emergencies and harms related to new psychoactive substances.
A French national, she studied public health and pharmaco-epidemiology (MSc). She is a graduate of the European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology training (EPIET). Her previous professional experiences were in Africa, France and England (Health Protection Agency, now Public health England), where she worked mainly on viral hepatitis, HIV and in the drugs field
Her previous research work at the national monitoring centre for drugs (OFDT) in France focused on early warning systems and new psychoactive drugs.
João Goulão
Portuguese National Drug Coordinator
João Castel-Branco Goulão is the Portuguese National Drugs Coordinator, Director General of the Intervention on Addictive Behaviours and Dependencies General Directorate and since January 2010 Chairman of the European Monitoring Centre on Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). He was Chairman of the Institute on Drugs and Drug Addiction (2005-2012), Head of the national focal point in the EMCDDA's REITOX network, member of the EMCDDA Board since 2005 and previously served on the European agency's Scientific Committee (1997–2002).
A medical doctor by profession, Dr. Goulão has over 20 years' experience regarding drug-related issues, working in this field since 1987 as general practitioner and since then all his professional life has been devoted to drugs and health. He was also a member of the Portuguese Committee which, in 1999, prepared the report on which the first Portuguese Drug Strategy, which included decriminalisation, was based.
At international level, he has a long experience in this field, not only at the European level, but also in the United Nations context.
Liesbeth Vandam
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Liesbeth Vandam is an 'Analyst — Scientific Coordination' in the Scientific division of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drugs Addiction (EMCDDA).
She holds a MSc degree in European Criminology and a PhD in Criminology, focusing on drug use among released prisoners. From 2006 until 2010 she worked in the Drug Unit of the Institute for International Research on Criminal Policy.
Since 2011, she is responsible for the coordination of the EMCDDA's technical programmes by providing technical and scientific support to the Scientific Director. She has published several research papers on drug-related crime, public expenditures, drug policy, drug use among prisoners and drug monitoring.
Linda Montanari
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Linda Montanari is a health sociologist.
From 1989 to 1992 she carried out social research with public institutes and universities in Italy. Since 1993 she has worked in the drug addiction field — from 1993 to 2000 in Italy as a sociologist in drug services and since 2000 at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug addiction (EMCDDA).
Her role at the EMCDDA is to coordinate one of the five key epidemiological indicators: the European Treatment Demand Indicator on people admitted to treatment for their drug use.
Since 2009 she is also responsible for epidemiological information related to drugs and prisons.
Lucas Wiessing
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Lucas Wiessing (PhD) is an epidemiologist and principal scientist at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in Lisbon.
He co-ordinates international studies on drug use and drug related consequences and interventions in the European Union – including on HIV and hepatitis C in injecting drug users, drug treatment and harm reduction.
He is a national from the Netherlands, has published frequently and collaborates with many relevant organisations and experts in his field, including participation in key international expert and advisory groups and scientific conferences.
Marica Ferri
Head of the Support to Practice Sector
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Marica Ferri is the Head of the Support to Practice Sector at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). She is responsible for the Scientific Programme for the European Drugs Summer School since 2015. She holds two Master´s degree, the first in Epidemiology (Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli) and the second in Systematic Reviewing of Scientific Literature in the Biomedical Field University of Milan/University of Oxford. and a PhD in International Public Health (Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Nova University, Lisbon). Since 1994 she has been working as a researcher and methodologist in the field of drug addiction and other medical disciplines.
She has been coordinating the Cochrane Drugs and Alcohol group during five years (1999–2004) and following this, she acted as a methodologist in the development of
several Guidelines at international, national and regional level. She coordinated the implementation phase of those guidelines, including training and assessment. . She taught Masters University courses at the University Statale of Milan, University Bocconi of Milan and Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli and at Telematic University of Rome (UNITELMA)
Nuno Capaz
Comission for the Dissuasion of Drug Addiction
Nuno Capaz has been working for the Portuguese Ministry of Health’s Dissuasion Commissions since they were created in 2001.
These boards were created to apply Portugal’s decriminalization law. As such, he is a member of an interdisciplinary team that evaluates drug users.
He has also been in charge of correspondence with foreign delegations seeking information and research about the Portuguese model for drug policy.
Robert West
University College London
Robert J. West, PhD, is Professor of Health Psychology and Director of Tobacco Studies at the Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre, University College London, UK. Professor West completed his PhD in Psychology in 1983 at University College London and worked as a postdoctoral researcher in the area of smoking at the Institute of Psychiatry until 1985 when he took up a lecturing position at Royal Holloway, London University. He continued his research into smoking and also began researching traffic accident involvement. In 1991 Professor West joined St George's, University of London, where he was made professor in 1996. He took up his present position in 2003.
Professor West's research includes clinical trials of new smoking cessation treatments, studies of the acute effects of cigarette withdrawal and population studies of smoking patterns. He has published more than 500 scientific works and is co-author of the English and Scottish National Smoking Cessation Guidelines that provided the blueprint for the UK-wide network of smoking cessation services that are now an established part of the National Health Service. He is author of the book, 'Theory of Addiction'.
Professor West is co-director of the NHS Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training, a member of the Board of Trustees of QUIT, a member of the Editorial Board of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco/WHO Tobacco Treatment Database, a member of the Editorial Board of the Cochrane Collaboration Tobacco Review Group, and is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Addiction. He is also Past-President of the Society for Research in Nicotine and Tobacco.
Teodora Groshkova
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Teodora Groshkova is a scientific analyst at the EMCDDA, contributing to a variety of projects on drug markets and health and social responses to drug problems. She joined the EMCDDA in 2010, having previously worked at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King’s College London, where she undertook research on a range of drug-related topics. She has a background in Clinical Psychology and a PhD in the Psychology of Addiction.
Thomas Seyler
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Thomas Seyler is a scientific analyst on drug use and the drug problem at the Public Health unit, EMCDDA.
He trained as a field epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (EPIET).
Before joining the EMCDDA, he worked in outbreak investigations, applied research, surveillance systems and training in Asia, Africa and Europe for infectious diseases such as Influenza, Chikungunya, Plague and Ebola.
At the EMCDDA Thomas is working on the Problem Drug Use (PDU) indicator, measuring the prevalence of the more problematic patterns of drug use in Europe, associated with the highest health risks and social costs, such as heroin use or injecting.
Tim Surmont
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Tim Surmont is a Belgian national working as scientific analyst, drug markets & drug-related crime, at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) based in Lisbon, since 2016.
Tim holds a Master’s degree in Criminological Sciences, and has been working at Ghent University as research assistant on drug phenomena. He has published papers on cannabis production and supply, the Dutch coffeeshop model, cross-border drug tourism and mixed method criminological research. His latest publication is: “The Spice Trade: a profit estimation of EU online vendors of herbal smoking mixtures”, available here: https://doi.org/10.1177/1057567717745345.
He has special interests in transnational drug distribution networks, the Dutch drug policy, cannabis production, synthetic drug production, drug precursor trafficking, synthetic cannabinoid distribution and processing, organised crime groups, Western Balkans, and outlaw motorcycle gangs.
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Associate Professor (with Habilitation)
- NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon
Catherine Moury is Associate Professor (with Habilitation) of Political Science at NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon, Portugal. Her research focuses on comparative politics and institutional change in the European Union. She is the director of the PhD program and is currently the Principal Investigator on a project on Intergenerational Justice. She has published in the American Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of European Public Policy, among others. Her forthcoming book is Capitalising on Constraint: The Politics of Conditionality in Bailed-out Countries during and after the Eurozone Crisis (Manchester University Press).
Head of the Support to Practice Sector
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Marica Ferri is the Head of the Support to Practice Sector at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). She is responsible for the Scientific Programme for the European Drugs Summer School since 2015. She holds two Master´s degree, the first in Epidemiology (Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli) and the second in Systematic Reviewing of Scientific Literature in the Biomedical Field University of Milan/University of Oxford. and a PhD in International Public Health (Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Nova University, Lisbon). Since 1994 she has been working as a researcher and methodologist in the field of drug addiction and other medical disciplines.
She has been coordinating the Cochrane Drugs and Alcohol group during five years (1999–2004) and following this, she acted as a methodologist in the development of
several Guidelines at international, national and regional level. She coordinated the implementation phase of those guidelines, including training and assessment. . She taught Masters University courses at the University Statale of Milan, University Bocconi of Milan and Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli and at Telematic University of Rome (UNITELMA)
Lecturers
Director
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Mr Goosdeel joined the EMCDDA in 1999 as a project manager in the area of EU enlargement and international relations. From 2005, he headed the agency’s Reitox and international cooperation unit. In this capacity, he played a central role in: coordinating a network of 30 national drug monitoring centres; preparing EU candidate and potential candidate countries for membership of the EMCDDA; developing cooperation with neighbouring countries to the EU; and nurturing relations with countries beyond the Union (Central Asia, Russia, Latin America). Much of his 30-year career working in the field of public health at national, European and international level.
He holds a Master’s degree in clinical psychology and a special diploma in advanced management. He is proficient in six languages: French (mother tongue); English, Spanish, Greek, Portuguese and Dutch. He was born on 7 November 1959 in Brussels.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Alessandra Bo is a biologist with a master degree in public health from the London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She has been working as a public health specialist in developing countries for both the European Commission and several international organizations. Among several activities, she set up a training course on Field Epidemiology for Sudanese Ministry of Health Officers and assisted an international organization with the final evaluation of a Reproductive Health programme.
In 2008 she joined the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and has been involved in the development and coordination of the EMCDDA Best Practice Portal.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Andrew Cunningham joined the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction in Lisbon, Portugal as a Scientific Analyst in Summer 2012. He is currently in the team responsible for the day-to-day running of the European Union's Early warning system for new psychoactive substances.
Andrew is a forensic chemist who started his police career in 1996 when he was appointed Forensic Chemist at the Strathclyde Police Forensic Science Laboratory in Glasgow, Scotland. In 2001, he took charge of the forensic drug laboratory in Glasgow, one of the busiest of such units in the United Kingdom.
From 2004 to 2012 he was employed as the Forensic Science Manager of the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency, the police body with the mandate to tackle organised crime in Scotland. Amongst other tasks, he coordinated a network of Scottish forensic scientists at the forefront of monitoring for the emergence of new drugs.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Anne began her professional career in London, where she worked as Researcher in an academic department at the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine during 1995-1999. From 1999 onwards, she has worked in the field of HIV and harm reduction in international organisations, including in UNAIDS, UNODC and UNICEF in several countries in East Asia and the Pacific, South Asia and South West Asia. In addition, she worked as Project Director and Research Coordinator with the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Health, off-site in northern Vietnam, where she oversaw implementation of a randomised controlled trial aimed at evaluating an HIV prevention intervention among people who inject drugs.
Anne holds a PhD in Health Psychology from University of London (2002) and an MSc in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University College London (2017). Anne relocated from Myanmar to join the EMCDDA in March 2019 to take up the post of Scientific analyst on health in the EU4Monitoring Drugs (EU4MD) project.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Brendan Hughes has been working at EMCDDA since 2001 in the field of national drug legislation, after gaining a Masters degree in International Criminal Law (LLM) specialising in narcotics law.
He manages the European Legal Database on Drugs (ELDD) which displays “penalties at a glance” for drug use, possession and trafficking laws, and has written various comparative overviews and analyses on different topics such as drug classifications, threshold quantities, alternatives to punishment, drug driving, and control systems for new psychoactive substances. He published the first European quantitative comparison of drug law sentencing and outcome statistics in 2009, followed by the first European qualitative comparison of trafficking scenarios in 2016.
He has advised ministers and parliamentary committees on issues such as decriminalisation, alternatives to punishment and cannabis legalisation, and has authored several articles published in peer-reviewed journals. Brendan Hughes is a British national.
Associate Professor (with Habilitation)
- NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon
Catherine Moury is Associate Professor (with Habilitation) of Political Science at NOVA FCSH University of Lisbon, Portugal. Her research focuses on comparative politics and institutional change in the European Union. She is the director of the PhD program and is currently the Principal Investigator on a project on Intergenerational Justice. She has published in the American Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of European Public Policy, among others. Her forthcoming book is Capitalising on Constraint: The Politics of Conditionality in Bailed-out Countries during and after the Eurozone Crisis (Manchester University Press).
Charlotte de Kock
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Danilo Ballotta (MSc) has been working for the past 20 years in the field of international drug policy. He joined the EMCDDA in 1997, where he worked on legislation, national and European policies and anti-drug coordination systems and has contributed to the agency's work on international drug policy. Since 2005, he has been a principal policy analyst at the EMCDDA, and coordinator of relations with European institutions. In this capacity, he represents the agency in the working group of the Council of Ministers of the European Union (HDG) and in the Strasbourg Council of Europe. Before joining the EMCDDA, Danilo worked at the United Nations Agency against Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and in the European Commission's Working Group on Justice and Home Affairs.
Ludwig-Maximilian University
Dr. Eva Hoch is a university lecturer and lead psychologist at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ludwig-Maximilian University, Munich. She is an internationally renowned expert in the field of cannabis. With her research group she developed, tested and translated "CANDIS treatment program for cannabis use disorders" to clinical practice. The evidence-based treatment manual was translated into different languages. In her most recent work, Dr. Hoch focuses also on health benefits of cannabinoids. Other research topics are: New behavioral and e-interventions, treatment practice guidelines, epidemiological studies, randomized-controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta-analysis, international collaboration and networks. Dr. Hoch was honored through several research awards.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Since 1996, Gregor Burkhart has been responsible for prevention responses at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction. He has developed databases on best practice examples (EDDRA), evaluation tools (EIB) the Prevention and Evaluation Resource Kit (PERK) and the recently published Prevention profiles on the EMCDDA’s website. His main activities include the development of common European indicators on the implementation of prevention policies in Member States and the promotion of a better and clear understanding of universal, selective, indicated as well as environmental prevention in Europe. Gregor works on methodologies for monitoring prevention responses as well as how to improve and evaluate them.
He is co-founder of the European Society for Prevention Research and holds a doctoral degree in medicine (medical anthropology) on the influence of culture on the classification and perception of body and diseases in the Candomblé cults of Bahia, Brazil as well as an MPH degree from the University of Düsseldorf.
Kosmicare
Helena Valente began working with people that use drugs in 2004. Helena worked for over 10 years coordinating national and European research and intervention projects in the drugs field. At the moment she is a researcher and Ph.D. Candidate at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences of the Porto University in Portugal and a founding member of Kosmicare association.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Isabelle Giraudon is a scientific analyst on health consequences related to drug use at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).
She is responsible for two of the five key epidemiological indicators monitored by the agency, the 'Drug-related deaths and mortality' and the ‘Drug-related infectious diseases’. This work includes research on morbidity and fatal overdoses, as well as the analysis of all causes of mortality among problem drug users, through European longitudinal cohort studies (including mortality related suicide, trauma, HIV and hepatitis).
She is also involved in other fields of monitoring and analysing drug-related harms, including in particular infectious diseases, acute emergencies and harms related to new psychoactive substances.
A French national, she studied public health and pharmaco-epidemiology (MSc). She is a graduate of the European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology training (EPIET). Her previous professional experiences were in Africa, France and England (Health Protection Agency, now Public health England), where she worked mainly on viral hepatitis, HIV and in the drugs field
Her previous research work at the national monitoring centre for drugs (OFDT) in France focused on early warning systems and new psychoactive drugs.
Portuguese National Drug Coordinator
João Castel-Branco Goulão is the Portuguese National Drugs Coordinator, Director General of the Intervention on Addictive Behaviours and Dependencies General Directorate and since January 2010 Chairman of the European Monitoring Centre on Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). He was Chairman of the Institute on Drugs and Drug Addiction (2005-2012), Head of the national focal point in the EMCDDA's REITOX network, member of the EMCDDA Board since 2005 and previously served on the European agency's Scientific Committee (1997–2002).
A medical doctor by profession, Dr. Goulão has over 20 years' experience regarding drug-related issues, working in this field since 1987 as general practitioner and since then all his professional life has been devoted to drugs and health. He was also a member of the Portuguese Committee which, in 1999, prepared the report on which the first Portuguese Drug Strategy, which included decriminalisation, was based.
At international level, he has a long experience in this field, not only at the European level, but also in the United Nations context.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Liesbeth Vandam is an 'Analyst — Scientific Coordination' in the Scientific division of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drugs Addiction (EMCDDA).
She holds a MSc degree in European Criminology and a PhD in Criminology, focusing on drug use among released prisoners. From 2006 until 2010 she worked in the Drug Unit of the Institute for International Research on Criminal Policy.
Since 2011, she is responsible for the coordination of the EMCDDA's technical programmes by providing technical and scientific support to the Scientific Director. She has published several research papers on drug-related crime, public expenditures, drug policy, drug use among prisoners and drug monitoring.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Linda Montanari is a health sociologist.
From 1989 to 1992 she carried out social research with public institutes and universities in Italy. Since 1993 she has worked in the drug addiction field — from 1993 to 2000 in Italy as a sociologist in drug services and since 2000 at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug addiction (EMCDDA).
Her role at the EMCDDA is to coordinate one of the five key epidemiological indicators: the European Treatment Demand Indicator on people admitted to treatment for their drug use.
Since 2009 she is also responsible for epidemiological information related to drugs and prisons.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Lucas Wiessing (PhD) is an epidemiologist and principal scientist at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in Lisbon.
He co-ordinates international studies on drug use and drug related consequences and interventions in the European Union – including on HIV and hepatitis C in injecting drug users, drug treatment and harm reduction.
He is a national from the Netherlands, has published frequently and collaborates with many relevant organisations and experts in his field, including participation in key international expert and advisory groups and scientific conferences.
Head of the Support to Practice Sector
- European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Marica Ferri is the Head of the Support to Practice Sector at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). She is responsible for the Scientific Programme for the European Drugs Summer School since 2015. She holds two Master´s degree, the first in Epidemiology (Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli) and the second in Systematic Reviewing of Scientific Literature in the Biomedical Field University of Milan/University of Oxford. and a PhD in International Public Health (Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Nova University, Lisbon). Since 1994 she has been working as a researcher and methodologist in the field of drug addiction and other medical disciplines.
She has been coordinating the Cochrane Drugs and Alcohol group during five years (1999–2004) and following this, she acted as a methodologist in the development of
several Guidelines at international, national and regional level. She coordinated the implementation phase of those guidelines, including training and assessment. . She taught Masters University courses at the University Statale of Milan, University Bocconi of Milan and Catholic University of Rome, A. Gemelli and at Telematic University of Rome (UNITELMA)
Comission for the Dissuasion of Drug Addiction
Nuno Capaz has been working for the Portuguese Ministry of Health’s Dissuasion Commissions since they were created in 2001.
These boards were created to apply Portugal’s decriminalization law. As such, he is a member of an interdisciplinary team that evaluates drug users.
He has also been in charge of correspondence with foreign delegations seeking information and research about the Portuguese model for drug policy.
University College London
Robert J. West, PhD, is Professor of Health Psychology and Director of Tobacco Studies at the Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre, University College London, UK. Professor West completed his PhD in Psychology in 1983 at University College London and worked as a postdoctoral researcher in the area of smoking at the Institute of Psychiatry until 1985 when he took up a lecturing position at Royal Holloway, London University. He continued his research into smoking and also began researching traffic accident involvement. In 1991 Professor West joined St George's, University of London, where he was made professor in 1996. He took up his present position in 2003.
Professor West's research includes clinical trials of new smoking cessation treatments, studies of the acute effects of cigarette withdrawal and population studies of smoking patterns. He has published more than 500 scientific works and is co-author of the English and Scottish National Smoking Cessation Guidelines that provided the blueprint for the UK-wide network of smoking cessation services that are now an established part of the National Health Service. He is author of the book, 'Theory of Addiction'.
Professor West is co-director of the NHS Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training, a member of the Board of Trustees of QUIT, a member of the Editorial Board of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco/WHO Tobacco Treatment Database, a member of the Editorial Board of the Cochrane Collaboration Tobacco Review Group, and is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Addiction. He is also Past-President of the Society for Research in Nicotine and Tobacco.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Teodora Groshkova is a scientific analyst at the EMCDDA, contributing to a variety of projects on drug markets and health and social responses to drug problems. She joined the EMCDDA in 2010, having previously worked at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King’s College London, where she undertook research on a range of drug-related topics. She has a background in Clinical Psychology and a PhD in the Psychology of Addiction.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Thomas Seyler is a scientific analyst on drug use and the drug problem at the Public Health unit, EMCDDA.
He trained as a field epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (EPIET).
Before joining the EMCDDA, he worked in outbreak investigations, applied research, surveillance systems and training in Asia, Africa and Europe for infectious diseases such as Influenza, Chikungunya, Plague and Ebola.
At the EMCDDA Thomas is working on the Problem Drug Use (PDU) indicator, measuring the prevalence of the more problematic patterns of drug use in Europe, associated with the highest health risks and social costs, such as heroin use or injecting.
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs & Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Tim Surmont is a Belgian national working as scientific analyst, drug markets & drug-related crime, at the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) based in Lisbon, since 2016.
Tim holds a Master’s degree in Criminological Sciences, and has been working at Ghent University as research assistant on drug phenomena. He has published papers on cannabis production and supply, the Dutch coffeeshop model, cross-border drug tourism and mixed method criminological research. His latest publication is: “The Spice Trade: a profit estimation of EU online vendors of herbal smoking mixtures”, available here: https://doi.org/10.1177/1057567717745345.
He has special interests in transnational drug distribution networks, the Dutch drug policy, cannabis production, synthetic drug production, drug precursor trafficking, synthetic cannabinoid distribution and processing, organised crime groups, Western Balkans, and outlaw motorcycle gangs.
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Preço
- Early bird fee - 360.00€ (for applicants enrolling in the first phase)
- Full Price - 420.00€ (for applicants enrolling in the second phase)
- Iscte Students - 240.00€
- Scholarships - 210.00€ (for scholarships, you must register in the first phase, you will be automatically eligible)
The programme fee includes:
- Tuition
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A deposit of 150€ is requested when submitting your application, refunded only in case of course cancelation. In all other situations the deposit is non-refundable.
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Horário
- 60 hours | two intensive weeks
- 12h30/13h00 - 15h30 GMT
Datas de Inscrição
1st phase: 19th October 2020 – 28th February 2021 (Notification of acceptance on 5th March 2021)
2nd phase: 1st March 2021 – 7th June 2021 (Notification of acceptance on 11th June 2021)
In order to apply please click on "Registration". Please attach in your application a scanned copy of your ID (EU citizens) or Passport, a digital photo (passport format), your Diploma(s), Curriculum Vitae and a proof of payment of the deposit
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