Meeting room : the rise and fall of the Concerned Parents [videorecording] / A film by Brian Gray & Jim Davis
Material type:![Film](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/VM.png)
- Drug addiction -- Dublin -- Video recordings
- Parents against drugs -- Drug addiction -- Ireland -- Video recordings
- Drug abuse -- Ireland -- Video recordings
- Drug control -- Ireland -- Video recordings
- Youth -- Ireland -- Dublin -- Drug use -- Video recordings
- Drug abuse -- Ireland -- Dublin -- Video recordings
- 362.29
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DVD | Carlow Campus Library Non-print Material | 362.29 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 71763 |
CW768, CW788
"Meeting Room shines a powerful searchlight on a controversial moment in recent Dublin history. In early 1982, residents of Hardwicke Street called a meeting to address the epidemic of heroin use in the flats and the lack of action from the authorities to address the impending catastrophe. The parents of the area decided to take matters into their own hands and soon had formed a group known as Concerned Parents against Drugs (CPAD) to confront the dealers and drive them out of the neighborhoods. Checkpoints were set up and patrols put in place; soon, large crowds were publicly evicting unrepentant pushers, and a mass movement was born. Using film, newspaper and photographic archives, Meeting Room reconstructs the social history of 'the most important social movement in Dublin since the 1913 lockout' and charts its rise and fall during the 1980's"
40.00