59.4%United States United States
8.7%United Kingdom United Kingdom
5%Canada Canada
4%Australia Australia
3.5%Philippines Philippines
2.6%Netherlands Netherlands
2.4%India India
1.6%Germany Germany
1%France France
0.7%Poland Poland

Today: 225
Yesterday: 251
This Week: 225
Last Week: 2221
This Month: 4813
Last Month: 6796
Total: 129412

Levels of Prohibition


Drug Abuse

 

Pubdate: Thu, 5 Mar 2009

Source: Economist, The (UK)

Copyright: 2009 The Economist Newspaper Limited

Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Website: http://www.economist.com/

 

Levels of Prohibition

 

A TOKER'S GUIDE

 

Some Countries Are Pushing the Boundaries of Liberalisation

 

UNDER a trio of conventions passed by the United Nations in 1961,

1971 and 1988, most countries have little discretion over how they

manage drug-taking. Other than for medical or scientific purposes,

those that have signed up to the conventions--more than 140 countries

to date, including nearly all of the rich world--must maintain the

prohibition on the selling and possession of narcotics.

 

Some are enthusiastic in their upholding of the treaties.

 

But others have grown frustrated, and are finding ways of bending the rules.

 

For the past century the standard-bearer of the prohibition movement

has been America, which imprisons more people for drug offences than

any other country.

 

But in 13 states the police are instructed not to arrest people for

cannabis possession. In Europe, the coffee shops of Amsterdam

famously sell cannabis alongside croissants. And other European

countries are lenient about stronger drugs.

 

Personal possession of any drug is not a criminal offence in Spain,

Portugal, Italy, the Czech Republic or the Baltic states.

 

Some German states and Swiss cantons are similarly relaxed, as are a

few Australian states.

 

Decriminalisation means that possessors may be stopped by the police

but do not earn a criminal conviction, and that punishments are

light: a fine in Spain, for instance, or suspension of one's driving

licence in Italy. Drug-takers can escape even this unless aggravating

circumstances apply, such as taking the drug in public or after

repeated warnings.

 

The legal gymnastics that allow countries to soften their line in

spite of the UN conventions are extraordinary. A country must ensure

that drug possession is a criminal, not civil, offence--but only

"subject to its constitutional principles and the basic concepts of

its legal system". This caveat has allowed countries to treat drug

possession as a civil matter.

 

Further wriggle-room is given in the UN's official commentary on the

convention, which states that the spirit of the rule is the

"improvement of the efficacy of national criminal justice systems in

the field of drug-trafficking". On this basis, countries may tell

their police to turn a blind eye in the name of policing efficacy.

 

It is an embarrassing mess for the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime

(UNODC), which prefers to highlight Sweden, a country that has

implemented strict drug laws and can claim some success in its quest

for a "drug-free society". In Sweden possession of any banned drug,

including cannabis, earns a criminal record and sometimes a jail

sentence (albeit one with an emphasis on treatment). Many countries

have such laws in theory, but Sweden carries them out: most of its

prosecutions for drug offences are for mere possession, rather than

dealing. A report from the UNODC in 2007 highlighted the country's

lowish levels of drug use compared with elsewhere in Europe, and

praised recent falls in consumption. Sweden has a below-average

number of "problem" drug users too, though there is less in it,

suggesting that the main effect of harsh laws may be to deter casual

pot-smokers rather than to prevent serious addiction.

 

Should other countries follow Sweden's example?

 

A different UN agency suggests not. A survey last year by the World

Health Organisation examined drug-taking in 17 countries and found no

link between the strictness of prohibition and the amount of drug

consumption. (The lenient Netherlands, interestingly, has one of the

lowest rates of "problem" drug use in Europe.) "Countries with more

stringent policies did not have lower levels of such drug use than

countries with more liberal policies," the researchers concluded.

 

For every strict regime like Sweden, there is another such as Britain

or America where a tough approach co-exists with widespread drug use.

Drug-taking was more closely linked to being wealthy, single and male

than anything else, the researchers found.

 

Changing drug policy over time also seems to have little impact.

 

In Britain, drugs are classified A, B or C to indicate how harmful

they are and to determine how severely offenders should be punished.

 

But after cannabis was downgraded from class B to C in 2004, usage

actually fell. All the same, the Home Office last year decided to

bump it back to B again, and last month announced that it would

ignore expert advice to downgrade ecstasy from A to B, fearing that

to do so would "send a message" that the drug was now safe. Is anyone

listening?

 

 

_______________________________________________

Theharderstuff mailing list

This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

http://mail.psychedelic-library.org/mailman/listinfo/theharderstuff

 

Last Updated (Wednesday, 05 January 2011 20:34)

 

Show Other Articles Of This Author