URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v14/n566/a07.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jul 2014
Source: Las Vegas Sun (NV)
Copyright: 2014 Las Vegas Sun, Inc
Contact:
Website: http://www.lasvegassun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/234
Author: Erin Ryan
Note: This column first appeared on lasvegasweekly.com June 26.
Page: 1
National Policy
EXAMINING THE FAILURES OF OUR DRUG WAR
War has been declared on the "war on drugs." Not by violent cartels,
but by economists, public health workers, human rights advocates and
others who believe that punitive, blanket prohibition is not only
failing but has done enormous harm. Thousands took to the streets of
more than 100 cities across the globe June 26, "reclaiming" the
United Nations' International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit
Trafficking by protesting the fallout of the drug war, from health
crises to mass incarceration.
"According to estimates, the drug war costs in excess of $100 billion
annually to enforce and has failed to diminish drug markets or reduce
use," states an advisory from the coalition behind the Support. Don't
Punish campaign's Global Day of Action.
I was stunned when I read that. I hadn't seen the statistic that more
than half of federal prison inmates in the U.S. are held on drug
convictions and another showing that as the number increased from the
1980s to today, so did the use of illicit drugs. I hadn't read about
executions of drug offenders in Indonesia and China, or about
orphaned children in poor communities where drugs are plentiful and
related health services are not. I hadn't heard that delegations from
Latin America, Europe and Africa called for policy reform at the
U.N.'s session of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs in March, or that
alternative strategies to the status quo were put forward by five
Nobel laureates and other experts at the London School of Economics in May.
Drug policy isn't a big part of my life because drugs aren't part of
it. But my community, local and global, is deeply affected by the
drug war, and I need a deeper understanding than the 1987 public
service announcement in which a son tells his father, "I learned it
by watching you."
That line was tattooed on my 8-year-old brain by the Partnership for
a Drug-Free America. Along with the infamous frying pan spot, it
scared the hell out of me, and that was the idea. I never even knew
what was in the plastic bag that got the son in trouble.
Mystification of drugs is dangerous, says Kasia Malinowska-Sempruch,
director of the Global Drug Policy Program of the Open Society
Foundations, which promotes human rights, education and social
justice through grants and other initiatives ( including working with
members of the Support. Don't Punish coalition ). "( People ) will
experiment, and the more reliable information they have the safer
those experiments will be."
No one is arguing the devastating effects illicit substances can
have, but current efforts to demystify and decriminalize cannabis
have fueled a larger discussion about the demands of a world that is
nowhere near drug-free.
"Decades of evidence conclusively show that the supply and demand for
illicit drugs are not something that can be eradicated. They can be
managed, either well or badly. They are currently being managed
badly," states the London School of Economics report "Ending the Drug
Wars: Report of the LSE Expert Group on the Economics of Drug
Policy." Supported by the Open Society Foundations, the report
asserts that despite more enforcement spending worldwide, drugs have
gotten cheaper and more pure. The authors call for massive
redirection of resources toward public health-based policies of harm
reduction and treatment, insisting that the war on drugs "has failed
based on its own terms."
"I think if we're open-minded and willing to accept that options
other than prohibition should be under discussion, then we will learn
something from it. But as things stand, prohibition is sold as the
only option, and that dramatically limits how effective we can be,"
says Malinowska-Sempruch, who has helped formulate policy at the
Global Fund and the World Health Organization and coauthored her
native Poland's first national AIDS program.
Addiction wasn't as well understood in 1961, when the U.N. Single
Convention on Narcotic Drugs - the foundation of coordinated global
drug policy - was established. Malinowska-Sempruch hopes Support.
Don't Punish will send the message that the system should reflect
what we've learned and adjust where it's ineffective or
counterproductive. Here in the U.S., the social and economic costs
are motivators for the decriminalization and even regulation of
cannabis, though the Office of National Drug Control Policy "rejects
the false choice between an enforcement-centric 'war on drugs' and
drug legalization."
Malinowska-Sempruch also sees the false dichotomy. For her, opposing
the drug war is not about championing a free-for-all. It's about
bringing control policy that's a generation old into this century,
tailoring it to the cultural realities of different countries and
ensuring that it does no harm.
"There really are people across the globe who are wondering whether
their national policies are the wisest. And I think there is now this
really significant and impressive willingness to learn from each
other," Malinowska-Sempruch says. Maybe that means taking the
conversation about drugs out of the frying pan, or at least telling
kids what's in that plastic bag.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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