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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 3 - Public Policy Options |
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Chapter 21 - Public policy optionsComponents
of
a public policy
The public
policies described in the preceding chapter, as well as the policies of Denmark,
Portugal, and Mexico, have a number of elements in common: they rely on a strong
decision-making body, promote interconnection and multiple viewpoints, aim at
national consensus on clear and measurable objectives, and rely on
independent
knowledge and assessment tools. Strong
decision-making
body
One may
disagree
with the political orientation of the American Office of National Drug Control
Policy (ONDCP); but no one can deny the office gives strong direction to
American national policy on drugs. Although one may be critical of the
structural rigidity of the French Missioninterministérielle
(MILDT),
or its timidity with respect to legislative debate, however, one cannot help but
agree that the MILDT has strongly influenced French policy and practice in the
past five years. Each country covered in the preceding chapter has a highly
visible, well-known decision-making body that has undeniable legitimacy and
methods of action that meet expectations. In our
opinion, the question of drugs, inasmuch as it is broader than the jurisdiction
of a single government department or level of government, inasmuch
as it refers to our collective ways of relating to society and others, and
especially inasmuch as it demands both integration and differentiation, must be
governed by an agency that is not accountable to a particular department and can
define direction for (not enforce diktats on) all players. Interconnection
The policies
on psychoactive substances are the concern of educators and therapists, police
officers and anthropologists, diplomats and local associations and, of course,
users. The ability to tie things together for knowledge and comprehension
purposes supposes an ability to link specialties, administrations, individuals.
This is the meaning of interconnection that a public policy must be capable of
making. A
shared
definition of shared objectives
In Chapters
11 and 18, we saw that federal policy on drugs, in addition to lacking rigour
and clarity, means and infrastructures, is not a national policy. This does not
mean there is no place for specific approaches by the provinces and territories
that make up the Canadian mosaic. However, if a common culture on drugs is to
emerge, if we are to better understand behaviours of use through geographic
comparison, if players are to benefit from the experience of others, tools must
be developed for the joint definition of shared objectives. Moreover, the
ability - and the will - to define objectives is the foundation of any future
evaluation to determine whether or not the action taken is in sync with the
objectives and is effective; in short, defining objectives is necessary because
we must be able to assess the impact of what we do. Information
tools
A public
policy must also rest on knowledge. Many witnesses, from all over, told
us this. European Union member countries, the United States and Australia have
developed powerful knowledge tools, specifically agencies that monitor drugs and
drug addictions. These monitoring agencies, most of them independent of the
government and political influence, are capable of measuring changing trends and
forms of use of various substances, understanding emerging trends and new
products, even assessing public policies. We are unable to see how Canada can
fail to develop a national knowledge tool on psychoactive substance use. |