Absolving drug users from arrest and prosecution for drug use and preparatory acts like acquisition, simple possession or cultivation for personal use does not lead to increased drug use, but does significantly lower pressure on law enforcement agencies and on the judicial and penitentiary systems, and it removes barriers for users with problematic patterns of use to approach treatment and harm reduction services.
-
A resounding success or a disastrous failure
Re-examining the interpretation of evidence on the Portuguese decriminalisation of illicit drugs
Caitlin Elizabeth Hughes & Alex StevensDrug and Alcohol Review, 31, 101–113
January 2012Two observers and scholars of the 2001 Portuguese drug policy reform consider divergent accounts of the reform which viewed it as a ‘resounding success’ or a ‘disastrous failure’. Acknowledging from their own experience the inherent difficulties in studying drug law reform, Caitlin Hughes and Alex Stevens take the central competing claims of the protagonists and consider them against the available data.They remind us of the way all sides of the drug policy debates call upon and alternatively use or misuse ‘evidence’ to feed into discussions of the worth, efficacy and desirability of different illicit drug policies.In doing so they provide pause for thought for those of us who operate as drug policy researchers and drug policy advocates.
Download the publication (PDF)
READ MORE... -
Drug Policy in Portugal
The Benefits of Decriminalizing Drug Use
Artur DomoslawskiOpen Society Foundations
August 2011?In 2000, the Portuguese government responded to widespread public concern over drugs by rejecting a "war on drugs" approach and instead decriminalized drug possession and use. It further rebuffed convention by placing the responsibility for decreasing drug demand as well as managing dependence under the Ministry of Health, rather than the Ministry of Justice. With this, the official response toward drug dependent persons shifted from viewing them as criminals, to treating them as patients.
Download the report (PDF)
READ MORE...Dug Policy Profile Portugal
Maria Moreira, Brendan Hughes, Claudia Costa Storti & Frank ZobelEuropean Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Drug Policy Profiles
June 2011This profile describes the national drug policy of Portugal, a policy that has attracted significant attention recently in the media and in policy debates. It considers national strategies and action plans, the legal context within which they operate and the public funds spent, or committed, to resource them. It also describes the political bodies and mechanisms set up to coordinate the response to the multi-faceted problem and the systems of evaluation that may help to improve future policy. The profile puts this information in context by outlining the size, wealth and economic situation of the country as a whole, as well as the historical development of the current policy.
Download the publication (PDF)
READ MORE...Time to decriminalise drugs?
J P de V van NiekerkSouth African Medical Journal (SAMJ) Vol. 101, No. 2
February 2011The drug trade has increased globally in intensity and reach, and substance abuse in South Africa has escalated rapidly. Drug misuse is a major social, legal and public health challenge despite the war on drugs, in which the USA has a disproportionate influence. Why this lack of progress and what can be done about it?
Download the document (PDF)
READ MORE...TNI-EMCDDA Expert Seminar on Threshold Quantities
Transnational Institute
Lisbon
January 20, 2011A wider trend for drug law reform is arising out of a felt need to make legislation more effective and more humane. Within this trend, a number of countries have considered decriminalisation or depenalisation models and many have, at least initially, considered threshold quantities as a good way to distinguish between what is possession and what is supply or trafficking and as a means to ensure that the sentences imposed are proportionate to the harmfulness of the offence.
Download the report (PDF)
READ MORE...What Can We Learn From The Portuguese Decriminalization of Illicit Drugs?
Caitlin Elizabeth Hughes & Alex StevensBritish Journal of Criminology
November 2010The issue of decriminalizing illicit drugs is hotly debated, but is rarely subject to evidence-based analysis. This paper examines the case of Portugal, a nation that decriminalized the use and possession of all illicit drugs on 1 July 2001. Drawing upon independent evaluations and interviews conducted with 13 key stakeholders in 2007 and 2009, it critically analyses the criminal justice and health impacts against trends from neighbouring Spain and Italy. It concludes that contrary to predictions, the Portuguese decriminalization did not lead to major increases in drug use. Indeed, evidence indicates reductions in problematic use, drug-related harms and criminal justice overcrowding. The article discusses these developments in the context of drug law debates and criminological discussions on late modern governance.
Download the document (PDF)
Portuguese priorities
Portugal’s response to drug use been the subject of much scrutiny and debate
Nick WarburtonDrink and Drugs News
Monday, October 11, 2010In July 2001, the Portuguese government introduced Law 30, setting in train a radical new approach to illicit drug use. In practice, it decriminalised the possession of certain quantities of drugs for personal use, instead referring users to one of the country’s 20 ‘dissuasion commissions’. Allied with decree 183 – which significantly expanded the network of harm reduction programmes – this meant that heroin users could seek help rather than face the wrath of the police.
Review of methodologies of evaluating effects of drug-related legal changes
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
April, 2010This paper analyses scientific and grey literature that examines the consequences of drug law changes, and describes their approach and methodologies. A multi-part search strategy identified 36 primary studies coming from Europe, North America and Australia, which were then categorised by the type of legal change they examined; changes to laws addressing illegal use and possession, changes in laws regulating legal use and possession, and enforcement strategies of existing laws such as police crackdowns and employee drug testing.
Download the document (PDF)
READ MORE...Penalisation of drug possession
Institutional action and costs
Ewelina Kuzmicz et al.Institute of Public Affairs, Analyses & Opinions, 11/104
December 2009Polish law provides punishment for possession of narcotic drugs. It is a controversial issue whether punishing for possession of any amount of drugs is a right thing to do. Regardless of one’s opinion, it is worth being aware of the consequences of the adopted legal solutions. In spite of the high cost, the enforcement of the Act does not result in mitigating drug problems in Poland, such as reduction of drug trafficking or “deterring” their potential users.
Download the document (PDF)
Mexico: The Law Against Small-Scale Drug Dealing
A Doubtful Venture
Jorge Hernández Tinajero & Carlos Zamudio AnglesSeries on Legislative Reform of Drug Policies Nr. 3
November 2009In August 2009, Mexico adopted a new law against small-scale drug dealing, which introduces some significant advances in key subjects, such as the recognising of and distinguishing between user, drug addict and dealer. However it still has significant flaws in continuing to treat demand and supply of drugs as a criminal and market phenomenon that are likely to undermine its successful application.
Download the report (207 KB)
READ MORE...Page 2 of 4
Drugs in the News
- Cannabis cafés and self-growing: Czechia presents draft of new marijuana law
11.01.2024 - Minister signs bill banning recreational use of weed
08.01.2024 - As the mayor of Amsterdam, I can see the Netherlands risks becoming a narco-state
05.01.2024 - Barcelona city council threatens to shut down cannabis social clubs
04.01.2024 - Swiss capital Bern considers legal cocaine project
20.12.2023 - High time: after five years, Dutch start legal cannabis trial
15.12.2023
Weblog
More weblogHilites
Balancing Treaty Stability and ChangeInter se modification of the UN drug control conventions to facilitate cannabis regulation
Connecting the dots...
Human rights, illicit cultivation and alternative development
Morocco and Cannabis
The Rise and Decline of Cannabis Prohibition
The History of Cannabis in the UN Drug Control System and Options For Reform