John Galt
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Time for another drugs thread.
The War on Drugs is beginning to be widely acknowledged as a failure, and globally changes in the way recreational drugs are approached by governments is changing. This has been occurring for a number of years in Western Europe (eg. Portugal, The Netherlands, Switzerland), but is now also being seen more prominently in the UK (with the re-introduction of the heroin prescription program) and even the US (removing federal intervention in state drug policy- potentially allowing for the legalisation of cannibis in California etc).
This hasn't been the case in Australia. Although some of the first examples of harm minimisation measures such as heroin injecting rooms were seen here, they have been met with strong opposition and further extending these to further decriminalise drugs and increase treatment has not seriously been considered at all. When the consequences of the criminalisation of drugs (prices, health, violence) are so damaging to users and the greater community, real harm minimisation means the transition from the treatment of drug use as a criminal issue to that of a health issue.
Do you agree/disagree? Is it time policy reform in this direction in Australia was more seriously considered?
Some resources:
Lecture by Dr Alex Wodak on the failure of the War on Drugs
BBC article on heroin prescription
Nick Davies- What's wrong with the war against drugs
The War on Drugs is beginning to be widely acknowledged as a failure, and globally changes in the way recreational drugs are approached by governments is changing. This has been occurring for a number of years in Western Europe (eg. Portugal, The Netherlands, Switzerland), but is now also being seen more prominently in the UK (with the re-introduction of the heroin prescription program) and even the US (removing federal intervention in state drug policy- potentially allowing for the legalisation of cannibis in California etc).
This hasn't been the case in Australia. Although some of the first examples of harm minimisation measures such as heroin injecting rooms were seen here, they have been met with strong opposition and further extending these to further decriminalise drugs and increase treatment has not seriously been considered at all. When the consequences of the criminalisation of drugs (prices, health, violence) are so damaging to users and the greater community, real harm minimisation means the transition from the treatment of drug use as a criminal issue to that of a health issue.
Do you agree/disagree? Is it time policy reform in this direction in Australia was more seriously considered?
Some resources:
Lecture by Dr Alex Wodak on the failure of the War on Drugs
BBC article on heroin prescription
Nick Davies- What's wrong with the war against drugs