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Punitive drug law enforcement failing, says Home Office study

neversickanymore

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Punitive drug law enforcement failing, says Home Office study
Oct 30 2014

There is no evidence that tough enforcement of the drug laws on personal possession leads to lower levels of drug use, according to the UK government’s first evidence-based study.

Examining international drug laws, the groundbreaking Home Office document brings to an end 40 years of almost unbroken official political rhetoric that only harsher penalties can tackle the problem caused by the likes of heroin, cocaine or cannabis.

It is signed off by the Conservative home secretary, Theresa May, and the Liberal Democrat minister Norman Baker, and will be published alongside an official expert report calling for a general ban on the sale and trade in legal highs.

Baker said the international comparisons demonstrated that “banging people up and increasing sentences does not stop drug use”. He said the last 40 years had seen a drugs debate in Britain based on the “lazy assumption in the rightwing press that if you have harsher penalties it will reduce drug use, but there is no evidence for that at all”.

Baker added: “If anything the evidence is to the contrary.”

The minister added that wider societal factors, such as a more risk-averse generation of young people, who suffered fewer alcohol problems and were healthier, contributed to the general downward trend in drug use.

It documents in detail the successes of the health-led approach in Portugal combining decriminalisation with other policies, and shows reductions in all types of drug use alongside falls in drug-related HIV and Aids cases.

The Home Office international research paper on the use of illegal drugs, which redeems a Liberal Democrat 2010 election pledge for a royal commission to examine the alternatives to the current drug laws, also leaves the door open on the legalisation experiments in the American states of Washington and Colorado, and in Uruguay.

continued here http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/oct/30/punitive-drug-laws-are-failing-study
 
Same article, different source -

Severe Punishments Don't Stop Drug Use, Home Office Report Says

The level of illegal drug use is not affected by how "tough" a country is when punishing those caught, a groundbreaking report has found, in what has been described as a "historic moment" in the battle to reform Britain's drug laws.

The Home Office's international study looked at different approaches to drugs policy and treatment in a number of countries, including some that have harsh criminal sanctions for users and some that have effectively decriminalised possession of drugs.

The study found no evidence that levels of drug use were affected by how "tough" or "soft" a government's response is, suggesting criminal sanctions have little impact.

The report also found positive health outcomes in Portugal, where possession of drugs is treated as a health matter rather a criminal issue, and no increase in use.

Joao Goulao, Portugal's national co-ordinator on drugs, said decriminalising possession and use of drugs had cut addiction.

He told the Today programme: "The problematic drug of use, mainly the problems connected to heroin, we estimate that they have halved from the reality in the late 1990s.

"We had estimations of around 100,000 people hooked on heroin, which is 1% of our population, and now we estimate that we have half of that."

Danny Kushlick, founder of the Transform Drug Policy Foundation, said: "This is a historic moment in the development of UK drug policy.

"For the first time in over 40 years the Home Office has admitted that enforcing tough drug laws doesn't necessarily reduce levels of drug use.

"It has also acknowledged that decriminalising the possession of drugs doesn't increase levels of use.

"Even more, the department in charge of drugs prohibition says it will take account of the experiments in the legal regulation of cannabis in Washington, Colorado and Uruguay."

But the Home Office said the government have said they have "absolutely no intention of decriminalising drugs". The report is likely to stoke coalition tensions as the Lib Dem and Tory stances on the issue clash.

Cont -

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/10/30/drug-laws-uk_n_6073400.html
 
Beautiful!!!

Doesn't seem like they quite get it, though:

[The study] will be published alongside an official expert report calling for a general ban on the sale and trade in legal highs.

Also:

It is expected the expert report on legal highs will recommend a threshold for substances to be banned so that those with minimal psychoactive effects such as alcohol, tobacco, tea and coffee would not be caught by the proposed new ban.

8)
 
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