Borders, Migration and Drug Policy 

In times of uncertainty, politicians scapegoat marginalized communities—blaming people like migrants and people who use drugs for complex societal challenges.  

This fear-mongering rhetoric drives deadly and wasteful decisions in government, spending public funds on military responses that drive violence and instability abroad, expanding unchecked surveillance powers for police and border officials, and doubling-down on prohibition, driving profits in the unregulated drug supply both in Canada and worldwide.   

Explore some of our work in partnership with international and migrant rights allies to unpack the urgent human rights and civil liberties issues around borders, drug policy and migration.  

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Bills C-2 & C-12 Will Make Canada’s Unregulated Drug Crisis Worse

A breakdown of how Bills C-2 and C-12 would worsen Canada’s toxic drug crisis by expanding enforcement and undermining health-based responses.

Webinar: Confronting Fear-Based Politics – Drug Policy, Borders and Migration

Explore how drug and migration policies intersect, showing how fear and criminalization harm marginalized communities and human rights.

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Canada’s Complicity in Illegal U.S. Military Strikes: When “Public Health” Drug Policy Meets Extrajudicial Killings 

Canada’s role in U.S. military strikes raises serious human rights concerns.