Dr
John Jiggens
is a writer and journalist who has published several books including The Incredible Exploding Man, Marijuana Australiana, The killer cop and the murder of Donald Mackay,
Sir Joseph Banks and the Question of Hemp, and, with
Jack Herer, the Australian version of The
Emperor Wears No Clothes. Along with Matt Mawson,
Anne Jones and Damien Ledwich, he edited The
Best of The Cane Toad Times. As an academic, Dr
John Jiggens has published several papers on estimating the
size of Australia's heroin market and marijuana market and the
cost of drug law enforcement. As a journalist, he has contributed
feature articles to The
Sydney Morning Herald, The
Age, Rolling
Stone, Penthouse, Simply Living and many other magazines.
He edited The Cane
Toad Times,The
Westender and Brisbane Theatre Magazine. His Ph.D was �Marijuana
Australiana: Cannabis Use, Popular Culture and the Americanisation
of Drugs Policy in Australia 1938 � 1988�. The two
volumes which derive from his doctoral dissertation are The
killer cop and the murder of Donald Mackay and Marijuana Australiana.
TALK
TITLE: How many cones? How many pills? How many
lines of coke?
TIME: 11.30am � 12.30pm Sunday 5 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
ABOUT
THE TALK:
John presents an investigation sponsored by a coalition of groups
including the Nimbin Hemp Embassy, Family and Friends for Drug
Law Reform and Students for Sensible Drug Policy to investigate
the size of Australia�s market in illegal drugs and its potential
for raising revenue under a regulated market. "The illicit
trade in drugs is worth tens of billions of dollars," says
Dr Jiggens. "But how many billions? There are about 85000
drug offences prosecuted in Australia each year and 3000 Australians
imprisoned for drug offences each year. How many hundreds of
millions does this cost? Prohibition is a kind of negative tax
that takes the form of police and justice system punishment,
which falls largely on Australia's twenty-somethings. If we
regulated drugs sensibly, how much money could be raised if
we employed by a taxation regime similar to other goods? To
answer this question, I estimate the size of the illicit drug
trade to the nearest hundred million cones, the nearest million
pills and the nearest million lines of coke."
Fiona
Patten is the President of the Australian
Sex Party and its Victorian senate candidate. She has been a
lobbyist for 20 years and intimately understands the machinations
of government and politics. Her advocacy work has included issues
such as film censorship, internet censorship, HIV/AIDS, sex
worker rights, disability rights and drugs. She is passionate
about equality, drug law reform and reducing the amount of government
involvement in people's personal lives. She is an atheist, a
republicanist, a keen swimmer and an occasional inhaler.
FORUM
TITLE: Enlightened Activism - How to be an effective campaigner and activist for cannabis
law reform?
TIME: 12.30 � 2.30pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
Cate Faehrmann
is a passionate environmentalist and social justice advocate.
She has been a Greens Member of the NSW Legislative Council
since 2010. During
her time in Parliament, Cate has been a strong advocate for
the environment, including working to protect national parks
and marine protected areas, fighting for tougher pollution laws
and campaigning around animal welfare. She fights hard for increased
public transport investment, including light rail and cycling
infrastructure. Cate has
been consulting on, and campaigning for, dying with dignity
laws since entering Parliament and plans to introduce a bill
to bring about this much-needed change in 2013.
Some of her recent achievements include winning support
for a Greens motion in the NSW Upper House calling on the
Commonwealth to support marriage equality and exposing hidden
plans to drill for coal seam gas in St Peters, in Sydney's inner
west. Prior to
entering Parliament, Cate headed up the Nature Conservation
Council of NSW, was a founding director of GetUp!, and a Board
member of the NSW Environmental Defenders' Office. She has also
managed Greens election campaigns and media strategies in New
Zealand, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia. Cate is
passionate about building social movements and empowering communities
to make positive change. One of her initiatives, Walk Against
Warming, became Australia�s biggest community day of action
on climate change, mobilising over 100,000 Australians to take
action.
FORUM
TITLE: Enlightened Activism - How to be an effective campaigner and activist for cannabis
law reform?
TIME: 12.30 � 2.30pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
Aidan
Ricketts
is a law lecturer at Southern Cross University as well as an
experienced activist author and social change trainer.� Aidan�s�
book �The Activists Handbook: A Step By Step Guide to Participatory
Democracy� was published by Zed books in London in 2012 and has become a popular
handbook for social movements Australia and abroad.� Aidan has
experience in a range of social, environmental and justice campaigns
spanning several decades. Aidan can be contacted via his website
http://aidanricketts.com where you can also view his regular commentary.
FORUM
TITLE: Enlightened Activism - How to be an effective campaigner and activist for cannabis
law reform?
TIME: 12.30 � 2.30pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
Dr
Alex Wodak AM was Director of the Alcohol and Drug Service,
St. Vincent�s Hospital, Sydney (1982-2012) but is now an Emeritus
Consultant. Dr. Wodak is President of the Australian Drug Law
Reform Foundation, and a Director of Australia21 and was President
of the International Harm Reduction Association (1996-2004).
He helped establish the first needle syringe programme and the
first medically supervised injecting centre in Australia (when
both were pre-legal) and often works in developing countries
on HIV control among injecting drug users.
FORUM
TITLE: Enlightened Activism - How to be an effective campaigner and activist for cannabis
law reform?
TIME: 12.30 � 2.30pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
FORUM TITLE: Is it Medication Time? Cannabis Medicine in Australia
in 2013
TIME: 12.30 � 1.30pm Sunday 5 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
Sandra
Heilpern lived in the Far North Coast for nearly 20 years
and has recently moved back to Sydney. She has a keen
interest in social justice issues and has worked in criminal
justice, child welfare, with Aborigines and in area of alcohol
and other drugs. She is looking forward to coming to the
2013 Mardi Grass and touching base with the Nimbin Community.
FORUM TITLE: Community Brainstorm � Imagining
Nimbin after Cannabis is Legal
TIME: 2.30 � 4.00pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
Bill
Bush came to drugs late in life. It was while
he was working in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
in Canberra that he started putting in stints as a volunteer
at a detoxification centre secreted in a cottage hidden behind
the Department of Defence. What he saw, read and heard at the
detox centre set him to asking questions but rarely finding
satisfactory answers. One was how a drug like heroin came to
be prohibited when it had been widely used medically, readily
available in cough mixtures and was manufactured from poppy
straw still grown in Tasmania in accordance with treaty concessions
that he had had a little to do with setting in place while working
in the treaties section of his department.
In 1997,
Bill fell in with a local Canberra group formed earlier that
year at a public meeting convened by Michael Moore, a local
Legislative Assembly member and now CEO of the Australian Public
Health Association, following an unprecedented 11 overdose deaths
in Canberra before Easter. Families and Friends for Drug Law
Reform was the fruit of that public meeting. The organisation
offered limitless scope for Bill�s many questions and even more
scope for prodding politicians and others in authority to apply
rational standards of evidence and reasoning to the examination
of a policy of prohibition which was a cause or an aggravating
factor in all of Australia's most serious social problems.
Bill�s
study of international law at the University of Cambridge endowed
him with some competence to run the treaties section and finally
the Antarctic section in the Department of Foreign Affairs before
he retired to full-time absorption in writing submissions and
otherwise stirring on behalf of Families and Friends for Drug
Law Reform. He is encouraged by the prospect of doing himself
out of a job.
FORUM
TITLE: Enlightened Activism - How to be an effective campaigner and activist for drug law
reform?
TIME: 12.30 � 2.30pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall
FORUM TITLE: Community Brainstorm � Imagining
Nimbin after Cannabis is Legal
TIME: 2.30 � 4.00pm Saturday 4 May 2013
LOCATION: Nimbin Town Hall