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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 optionsConclusion
The title
of this section includes our conclusion: if
the
aim of public policy is to diminish consumption and supply of drugs,
specifically cannabis, all signs indicate complete failure. We agree with
the conclusions from the Swiss studies that prohibiting cannabis use through
the application of criminal law appears to have little, if any, influence on
levels of use. One may think the situation would be worse if not for current anti-drug action. This
maybe so. Conversely, one may also think that the negative impact of anti-drug
programs that are currently centre stage are greater than the positive effect,
specifically non-compliance with laws inconsistent with majority
attitudes and behaviour. One of the reasons for this failure is the
excessive emphasis placed on criminal law in a context where prohibition of use
and a drug-free society appear to remain the omnipresent and determining
direction of current public policies. Does this
mean nothing can be done? We do not believe so. Does it mean market forces
should be allowed to rule as if drugs were goods like any other
commodity, a solution suggested by some free-market advocates?[1][16]Certainly not. Psychoactive substances,
including cannabis, alcohol, and medications, are not ordinary commodities.
Although cannabis (see Chapter 7)does not have the deleterious effects that
some people claim and is in some respects a less harmful substance than tobacco,
it must be the subject of regulation and government intervention. The question raised by the patent and costly
failure in human, social, and economic terms of Canada’s public policy direction
to date, is what should be the direction and components of public policy on
cannabis and, as a corollary, the role and direction of legislation. This is
what is discussed in the following sections. |