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For Immediate Release
July 14, 2003
Contact:
Josephine Crisostomo
617-618-2720
jcrisostomo@edc.org
EDC Sponsors Institute on Campus-Community Collaborations
to Curb College Drinking
MINNEAPOLIS, MN – EDC's
Higher Education Center for Alcohol
and Other Drug Prevention recently
brought together leaders from 39 states
to meet with top alcohol policy researchers as part of a national institute
on reducing high-risk drinking on college campuses.
The Statewide Initiatives Leadership Institute, held in Minnesota in
late June, focused on providing state teams with information and skills
needed to plan state and local policy change. Experts from the Center
on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, the University of Minnesota Alcohol Epidemiology
Program, and the Enforce the Underage Drinking Laws Training Center made
presentations on their prevention work on a local, state, and national
level.
“In order to change the culture of high-risk drinking by college
students, campus administrators must work closely with local and state
government officials and community leaders,” states William DeJong,
director of the Higher Education Center, a project of EDC’s Health
and Human Development Programs division. “By working together to
strengthen state and local policy and enforcement, these campus and community
collaborations have the potential to prevent alcohol problems not just
among college students but in society as a whole.”
Previous institutes have focused on how statewide initiative leaders
can support the formation of campus and community coalitions dedicated
to changing the broader environment that encourages student substance
use. Typically, meeting participants come from state government substance
abuse officers and alcohol beverage control agencies, colleges and universities,
and state coalitions working to reduce underage drinking.
“We know that neighborhoods surrounding campuses often experience
alcohol-related disturbances,” said Traci Toomey, associate director
of the University of Minnesota Alcohol Epidemiology Program. “It’s
appropriate that campus officials should take a leadership role in working
with state and local officials to change policies to reduce problems
associated with alcohol use in the larger community.”
Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, with supplemental funding
from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Higher Education Center
serves as the national resource center for institutions of higher education
concerned with reducing alcohol and other drug use. The Institute was
funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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