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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 2 - Policies and Practices In Canada |
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Chapter 18 - Observations on practicesIncongruities
of approach
Some myths are long-lived. Although
not supported by the empirical research we have examined, images of cannabis
leading to use of hard drugs, damaging brain functions permanently, or causing
academic failure, to name but these few, continue to abound. We are well aware that there is no
international consensus among researchers on these issues. But we are equally
aware that it is difficult to alter preconceptions. Last year, at an
international scientific conference in Europe, whose results we have already
cited, some participants concluded that, although a consensus was emerging in
the research community, its existence was irrelevant because all the countries
represented were signatories of international conventions on drugs. One always
finds ways to circumvent reality when it does not fit ideology. Let there not be finger-pointing.
Those who most frequently hold these beliefs about cannabis are also those who
are confronted daily with the negative effects of drug abuse: crime and
violence for the police officer on the beat; human misery for those in
therapeutic practice. Their view of drugs, of cannabis in particular, is
naturally coloured by their experience, which puts them in situations of
contact with abuse, distress, violence and death. But those users who require
treatment are no more representative of the cannabis user population than are
the street kids and petty offenders the police see constantly. Clearly, what is required is a
bridge, an intermediary between the worlds of research and the front lines,
between decision-makers and field workers and between them all and civil
society. While the research is not perfect, while we deplore the lack of a
truly national system of information, the information is, nevertheless, there
in quantity, as we have had occasion to observe in the course of our
proceedings. But it needs wide circulation, and above all it needs to be the
subject of public debate and discussion. The CCSA could disseminate this
information and promote discussion, were it given the resources - a role it has
never had the means to play. The researchers themselves must bear
some of the responsibility for the situation. They tend not to care whether
their work reaches those in positions of power or whether it is distributed in
political forums or in the field. Some are still shackled to the idea of
“academic freedom,” thinking that their involvement in the worlds of
decision-making and practice will contaminate the objectivity of their
research. It is thus not surprising that knowledge of the players on the ground
is limited to what their experience provides; nor are the institutions to which
they belong necessarily equipped to systematize and contextualize such
knowledge either. We have observed a serious gulf
between the positions taken by the research community and those taken by
front-line workers, including the police and the therapeutic community. It
would be too easy to reduce the position of the practitioners to “corporate”
interests. There is a need for basic discussion and exchange, which is not
happening among the various players; and too often the experience-based
knowledge derived from practice has no legitimacy in the eyes of the scientific
community, though this is the knowledge that attracts the attention of the
decision-makers, the media and the general public. In practice, glaring contradictions
arise between the discourse and the approach of the two sides. While young
people hear about the potential therapeutic value of cannabis and about
decriminalization, they see police operations in the schools and listen to
classroom lectures on its dangers. While the primary targets of police action
are supposed to be the traffickers, young people read that thousands of people
are arrested every year for simple possession of marijuana. While images of
junkies destroyed by heroin are flashed in the media, young people also hear
that it is available by prescription. And drug users continued to be picked up
by the police as they leave needle-exchange clinics. Caught between these contradictory
words and actions, how should they know what to think? These incongruities are exacerbated
by the imbalance in power and resources. Non-profit groups that provide
cannabis for therapeutic purposes talked about this at length: their
credibility with law-enforcement agencies is often hard earned, built over
time, with a few individual members of the police. They are well aware that
their status is precarious and that they might have to “bail out” at any
moment. Public health agencies that attempt to foster discussion and introduce
harm-reduction practices are equally aware that they are operating at the outer
limits of the law and that their actions are not universally supported.
Researchers who wish to study the therapeutic applications of cannabis are
restricted by the present system of prohibition. In
the case of alcohol, a decision-making structure exists to give a relatively
equal voice to the various players involved. It includes the agencies that regulate production,
distribution and sale, the public health organizations that work to reduce
at-risk behaviours and clarify the determinants of abuse, the justice system
that intervenes to prevent smuggling and arrest those irresponsible people who
drive while impaired. The co-operation and dialogue among these players is
close and constant, and there are even formal channels for co-operation and
dialogue with the distilling and brewing industries. The result, by and large,
is uniform practices and views, although this is not to imply that all problems
have been solved. But in the field of illegal drugs, there is nothing like
this. Dialogue where certain words cannot be spoken or ideas expressed, where
certain decisions can never be made and resources are so unequally shared among
the players, is merely empty an exercise meant to give the illusion that
something is being achieved. |