Tehseen Noorani, PhD is a Marie Curie and Durham University COFUND Junior Research Fellow. His research investigates the social, political and epistemic potential of trauma, illness and drugs in producing 'limit-experiences'. From 2013-2015 Tehseen was a NIDA-funded postdoctoral research fellow on at Johns Hopkins University, where he led qualitative research for a pharmacology team researching psychedelic experiences. He is currently conducting a comparative ethnography of psychedelics use, and has taught at New York University and the University of East London.
November 2, 2017
What is it about psychedelics that has the power to change lives for the better? The answer might lie in the unique ways that psychedelics interact with the brain.
November 7, 2017
Nick Powers stands alone on stage as the only black speaker and the last voice to close out a conference on psychedelics.
November 9, 2017
On Friday, November 3, 2017, Maine Governor Paul LePage (R) vetoed legislation to regulate cannabis sales in the state.
November 14, 2017
For anyone who remembers the Reagan Administration's awesome response to the '80s crack epidemic, the Trump plan may prompt discouraging deja vu.
November 15, 2017
Medellín attracts the attention of tourists seeking a new kind of experience: doing cocaine in the city of Pablo Escobar.
November 20, 2017
A group in Oregon is drafting a ballot initiative for 2020 that would allow individuals to take psilocybin in supervised settings.
November 22, 2017
Are these states really similar? Many meditators have answered quite clearly, yes.
November 27, 2017
My decision to attend law school was unconventional, at best.
December 4, 2017
The Ibogaine Conversation Part 1 | This series explores the unique challenges ibogaine presents in how we approach plant medicine, harm reduction, and treatment for addiction, through the lens of ibogaine researchers, providers, patients, and advocates from around the world.
December 4, 2017
The Ibogaine Conversation Part 2 | Our first stop is in Gabon, Africa, where consumption of the iboga root bark is intimately tied to the ancient spiritual discipline known as Bwiti.