It's global .. not local.
Cannabis Regulation Deliberated as U.N. Develops New International Drug Strategy
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Jag Davies -- 786-393-8100, jag.davies@gmail.com or Lady Amanda Feilding -- amanda@beckleyfoundation.org
VIENNA, Austria - The Beckley Foundation, a U.N.-accredited NGO, joined with a diverse coalition of eminent scientists, other NGOs and political leaders to propose a paradigm shift in cannabis policy as the U.N. Commission on Narcotic Drugs held a high-level meeting from March 11-20 to review the past decade of international drug policy and recommend strategies for future decades.
The Beckley Foundation's Global Cannabis Commission, comprised of an international team of leading public health policy experts, presented the findings of their Report at several meetings in Vienna. The Conclusions & Recommendations of the Report map out solutions to break the current stalemate, including a new draft Framework Convention on Cannabis Control. The Report provides a review of the issues that must be considered by policymakers in developing evidence-based cannabis policies that minimize the harms associated with its use and control. Among its recommendations, the Commission suggests allowing individual countries the leeway to implement differing systems of regulation that best suit their individual needs--even to the point of state production and licensed sale.
As documented in the Cannabis Commission's Report, cannabis is the mainstay of the global War on Drugs. The U.N. has estimated that cannabis is used regularly by 166 million people--4% of the global adult population, compared to 1% for all other illegal drugs combined. In the U.S., where 42% of the adult population has used cannabis, three-quarters of a million citizens are arrested every year for simple possession. Additionally, in certain producer/transit countries such as Mexico, where cannabis comprises half of the drug trafficking market, prohibitionist policies have led to a grim and growing war.
A decade ago the U.N. issued a declaration outlining its 10-year global strategy to "eliminate or significantly reduce" all illicit coca, cannabis, and opium plants from the earth under the motto, "A drug free world we can do it!" Yet, the global experience of the past 10 years has demonstrated that current drug policies have exacerbated--not abated--violence and health epidemics, while also causing massive civil and human rights violations. Under current international norms, anyone who possesses an illegal drug such as cannabis is treated as a serious criminal--subject to the possibility of arrest, property seizure, imprisonment, denial of access to public benefits, such as financial aid for college or welfare, potential loss of child custody and the ability to get a job. Still, despite these harsh punishments and a spectacular increase in government drug control expenditures, drug production and consumption have risen while drug violence and health epidemics have worsened.
Increasingly, however, members of the international community are acknowledging the failure of U.S.-style drug prohibition as a model for global drug policy and have turned toward health-based approaches more in line with the U.N.'s health and human rights mandates. In the U.S., alternatives to cannabis prohibition are increasingly becoming politically viable--three-quarters of citizens think that the drug war is a failure, thirteen states have passed laws to protect patients who use medical marijuana, several states have introduced legislation to follow Massachusetts' lead by decriminalizing marijuana, and public support for marijuana legalization is polling higher than ever.
Although signatories of the international drug control treaties are formally required to criminalize the production, distribution, sale, use and possession of cannabis, a number of countries have de facto adopted less punitive policies. As documented in the Report, reforms reducing or removing criminal sanctions for the use and possession of cannabis have been shown not to lead to an increase in the prevalence of use or harms. Enforcement of such regimes is also vastly more cost-effective, enabling society to address other pressing issues more effectively.
"The Report of the Global Cannabis Commission convened by the Beckley Foundation is a valuable contribution to our thinking on the thorny subject of illicit drugs ... The failure of the 'War on Drugs' strategy is quite evident around the world, but the alternatives are not easy to grasp. We need to change our way of thinking and acting on this matter. New policies must be based on empirical data, not on ideological assumptions and dogmas," said former President of Brazil Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who has endorsed the Report. Influenced by the Beckley Foundation Report, last month, Cardoso, along with the former Presidents of Mexico and Colombia and 17 delegates from nine Latin American nations, called for a "paradigm shift" in international drug policy that includes the decriminalization of cannabis.
Although delegates from several countries, in addition to the press (such as the cover story of last week's Economist), agree with the approach of the Beckley Foundation's Report, the Political Declaration adopted by U.N. member states earlier this week failed to even mention cannabis. In addition, to the dissatisfaction of many countries, the Declaration adopted in Vienna earlier this week omitted any emphasis on "harm reduction" approaches to the control and regulation of drugs.
The Global Cannabis Commission Report will be co-published with Oxford University Press in Spring, 2009. The text of the Report and new draft Framework Convention on Cannabis Control, as well as additional background information, are available at: beckleyfoundation.org |