1、1 The facts cited in this paper, unless otherwise noted, are drawn from U.S. Congress, HouseCommittee on Government Reform, ONDCP Reauthorization: The National Youth Anti-DrugMedia Campaign, 108th Cong., 1st sess., Mar. 27, 2003 (Washington: GPO, 2003).Congressional Research Service The Library of C
2、ongressCRS Report for CongressReceived through the CRS WebOrder Code RS21490Updated July 3, 2006War on Drugs: The National Youth Anti-DrugMedia CampaignMark EddySpecialist in Social LegislationDomestic Social Policy DivisionSummaryAuthorization of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, a multi
3、-mediafederal program to persuade Americas youth not to use drugs, expired at the end ofFY2002. H.R. 2829 (passed by the House on March 13, 2006) and S. 2560 (reportedby the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 25, 2006) would reauthorize the mediacampaign, along with the other programs run by the Offi
4、ce of National Drug ControlPolicy (ONDCP). H.R. 5576, the House-passed appropriations bill that funds ONDCP,proposes $100 million for the campaign for FY2007. The media campaignseffectiveness has been questioned, and the program has engendered its share ofcontroversy. Nevertheless, ONDCP, the office