Decriminalisation of drugs comes to the fore Part 1 FOR
With Dr. Frank McField announcing his intention to stand in the May General Election and campaigning for the decriminalization of drug use I thought you might be interested in the two recent publications and stories that support his stance.
A Quiet Revolution: Drug Decriminalisation Policies in Practice Across the Globe
‘A Quiet Revolution: Drug Decriminalisation Policies in Practice Across the Globe’ is the first report to support Release’s campaign ‘Drugs – It’s Time for Better Laws‘. This report looks at over 20 countries that have adopted some form of decriminalisation of drug possession, including some States that have only decriminalised cannabis possession. The main aim of the report was to look at the existing research to establish whether the adoption of a decriminalised policy led to significant increases in drug use – the simple answer is that it did not. This then begs the question that if the model of enforcement adopted has little impact on levels of use what is the point in pursuing a criminal justice approach which carries significant harms for individuals?
As stated, this new report supports our campaign which was launched in June 2011 and saw the organisation write to David Cameron, the British Prime Minister, calling for a review of our current drug policies and promoting the introduction of decriminalisation of drug possession. The letter was supported by high profile individuals including Sting, Richard Branson, Caroline Lucas MP and Baroness Meacher.
The campaign will progress this year with the publication of three reports: the first, this paper on decriminalisation, demonstrates that the law enforcement model adopted has little impact on the levels of drug use within a country and yet the criminalisation of people who use drugs causes significant harms to the individual and society. The second paper will be launched in autumn 2012 and will look at the disproportionate policing and prosecution of drug possession offences in the UK. The final report to be launched in early 2013 will look at the crude economic costs associated with policing and prosecuting the possession of drugs in the UK.
You can download the report at:
http://www.release.org.uk/publications/drug-decriminalisation-policies-in-practice-across-the-globe
See following BBC story on the subject by their Home affairs correspondent, Dominic Casciani:
Consider drugs decriminalisation system, MPs say
The government is being urged by MPs to closely consider a system of drugs decriminalisation used in Portugal.
The Home Affairs Committee said it was impressed with the approach to cutting drug use where people found with small amounts are not always prosecuted.
It also asks ministers to monitor the effects of cannabis legalisation in other parts of the world.
The Home Office rejected its call for a Royal Commission on UK drugs policy, saying that was “not necessary”.
However, the Home Office minister, Jeremy Browne, said the government was “open to new ways of thinking”.
He told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We are open-minded, we think it’s a decent, thoughtful, balanced report. We will consider it carefully.”
Official figures show that drug use in England and Wales is at its lowest rate under current measurements since 1996.
However, there is concern over the growth and prevalence of “legal highs”, some of which are banned, amid a recorded rise in deaths linked to their use.
The committee stops short of supporting a relaxation of legal sanctions for drug use, as suggested by experts at the UK Drug Policy Commission in October, but it does call on ministers to look in detail at the idea.
In its wide-ranging report*, the cross-party Home Affairs Committee said MPs had visited Portugal as part of attempts to understand different systems of decriminalisation which were being used around the world to manage the harm of drugs, rather than just hand out penalties for their use.
Portugal has not legalised drugs – but it has a system of not imposing criminal penalties on drug users who enter into special programmes designed to end their habit.
“We were impressed by what we saw of the Portuguese depenalised system,” said the MPs. “It had clearly reduced public concern about drug use in that country, and was supported by all political parties and the police.
“The current political debate in Portugal is about how treatment is funded… not about depenalisation itself.
“Although it is not certain that the Portuguese experience could be replicated in the UK, given societal differences, we believe this is a model that merits significantly closer consideration.”
The committee urged ministers to monitor the effect of plans for cannabis legalisation in the US states of Colorado and Washington and in Uruguay,
The MPs said that although drugs use was falling, it said the impact of their use still cost billions and that there were questions over whether the international strategy was working.
“The drugs trade is the most lucrative form of crime, affecting most countries, if not every country in the world,” said the MPs.
“The principal aim of government drugs policy should be first and foremost to minimise the damage caused to the victims of drug-related crime, drug users and others.”
‘Twin approach’
The Home Affairs Committee spent a year examining drugs policy, receiving evidence from almost 200 individuals and organisations.
The report stated that the action currently being taken by international community is not working and the government’s position must be informed by a “thorough understanding of the global situation and possible alternative policies”.
MPs went on to say the time is right for a “fundamental review of all UK drugs policy in the international context”.
The committee’s chairman, Keith Vaz MP, said they were not calling for decriminalisation but rather a study of what has worked elsewhere.
“We need to take the hysteria out of looking at drugs policy and look at two very important facts,” he said.
“First and foremost the victims – those who are the victims of those who deal in drugs and those who use drugs. And secondly the criminality of those in the system.
“We need to be pretty tough on those who go to prison and acquire the habit of using drugs in prison. We need to make sure we cut down on re-offending but we also need to look at other systems and monitor them carefully.
“After a year scrutinising UK drugs policy, it is clear to us that many aspects of it are simply not working and it needs to be fully reviewed.
“We cannot afford to kick this issue into the long grass. We have recommended that a Royal Commission be set up with an end-date of 2015,” he added.
The Home Office disagreed that a Royal Commission was the correct course of action.
“Our current laws draw on the best available evidence and as such we have no intention of downgrading or declassifying cannabis,” a spokesperson said.
“A Royal Commission on drugs is simply not necessary. Our cross-government approach is working.
“Drug usage is at its lowest level since records began and people going into treatment today are far more likely to free themselves from dependency than ever before.”
Marjorie Wallace, the chief executive of the mental health charity Sane, expressed concern about the possible impact on cannabis use.
“If the report is to be responsible, it must take account of the specific damage that cannabis can do to the developing brain, not only as recent studies have shown inducing irreversible cognitive deterioration but in around 10% of cases triggering severe psychotic illness,” she said.
However, Alex Stevens, a professor in criminal justice at the University of Kent, said the evidence supported the decriminalisation of cannabis.
“Those countries that have moved towards less harsh enforcement of cannabis laws – and other drug laws – have not seen huge increases in drug use and have been able to reduce the cost of the criminal justice system and the harm that’s done by giving people criminal records.”
For more on this story go to:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20648276
The Home Affairs Committee report can be downloaded at:
The KEY facts from the report are these:
- England and Wales has almost the lowest recorded level of drug use in the adult population since measurement began in 1996. Individuals reporting use of any drug in the last year fell significantly from 11.1% in 1996 to 8.9% in 2011-12. There was also a substantial fall in the use of cannabis from 9.5% in 1996 to 6.9% in 2011-12.
- The prevalence of drug use among 11 to 15 year olds has also declined since 2001. In 2010, 18% of pupils reported that they had ever taken drugs and 12% said they had taken drugs in the last year, compared with 29% and 20% in 2001.
- Around four in five adults (78%) who had taken any illicit drug in the last year thought it was very or fairly easy for them to personally get illegal drugs when they wanted them: around a third (34%) thought it was very easy and 44% thought it fairly easy. Adults who had not taken any illicit drug in the last year perceived a slightly lower level of ease of obtaining illegal drugs if they wanted them (75% perceived it to be very or fairly easy to obtain drugs compared with 78% of those that had taken drugs in the last year).
- Around 50% of all organised crime groups are involved in drugs and 80% of the most harmful groups are involved in drugs predominantly in importation/supply of class A drugs.
- Drugs account for some 20% of all crime proceeds, about half of transnational organized crime proceeds and between 0.6% and 0.9% of global GDP. Drug-related profits available for money-laundering through the financial system would be equivalent to between 0.4% and 0.6% of global GDP.