War will not end because some people win a lot with this. Period.
Nobel Prize economists call for end to war on drugs
Five Nobel Prize-winning economists are calling for an end to the global
war on drugs and a shift over to policies that focus on public health.
The economists, along with over a dozen professors and politicians, have
all endorsed a report released last night by the London School of
Economics and Political Science, which breaks down the successes and
failures of the worldwide drug war and finds that it has had "enormous
negative outcomes and collateral damage." The report recommends that
countries instead focus on individualized approaches to drug laws and
encourages experimentation with lifting prohibitions.
The report details a laundry list of negative results from the war on
drugs, including "mass incarceration in the US, highly repressive
policies in Asia, vast corruption and political destabilization in
Afghanistan and West Africa, immense violence in Latin America, an HIV
epidemic in Russia, an acute global shortage of pain medication and the
propagation of systematic human rights abuses around the world." In
part, the report finds that the drug war's failings come from its high
costs for low returns and the unwillingness of countries where drugs are
produced to risk their own security with enforcement efforts.
It hasn't been a complete failure, however. The report finds that in
some areas, like the US, the reduced dependency achieved through strict
prohibition can outweigh the financial costs. "The alleged ‘failure’ of
the ‘war on drugs’ is a standard point of departure for discussions of
drug law reform, but reports of prohibition’s failure – like those of
Mark Twain’s death – may be exaggerated," writes Jonathan P. Caulkins, a
Carnegie Mellon University professor of public policy. Even so,
Caulkins notes the United States' prohibition is "rather extreme and
inefficient" and that it's "gone beyond the point of diminishing
returns." By cutting drug penalties in half across the board, Caulkins
says that the US should would only see a "very modest" increase in use
and dependency, yet have a "kinder, gentler prohibition."
That said, other sections of the report that look at the drug war from
more than a financial perspective are more condemning of these strict
policies. In notes that in the United States, such policies been viewed
as legally enforced discrimination and can even be seen as curtailing
constitutional rights due to their extremity. Writer Alejandro Madrazo
Lajous, professor in the legal studies division of Mexico's Center for
Research and Teaching Economics, says that this crippling of
constitutional rights extends to other countries too, including Mexico,
where organized crime suspects can be detained for extended periods of
time without formal charges against them, and Columbia, where law
enforcement also has expanded ability to search and detain suspects.
The drug war’s failure has been recognized by public health
professionals, security experts, human rights authorities and now some
of the world’s most respected economists,” John Collins, the report's
editor, says in a statement. "It will take time for a new international
strategy to emerge. However, the most immediate task is ensuring a sound
economic basis for the policies, and then to reallocate international
resources accordingly."
The report makes a number of policy suggestions, including many to
address the mass incarcerations resulting from the drug war. In
particular, it recommends ending long mandatory sentencing and releasing
existing offenders who pose no risk or whose long sentences no longer
apply — as the US has begun to do in some circumstances. As for public
health, the report says that governments should make support programs
for drug users a priority. It also recommends that lawmakers should make
policies that can be updated and later adjusted based on their
performance. It supports experimenting with new policies too, noting
that legalization of marijuana in certain areas can provide valuable
information to other countries, whether those policies succeed or fail.
Those involved intend to have the report sent to the UN. Guatemala’s
interior minister will receive the report today and its president will
proceed to present it at international forums, including the United
Nations. "The UN must recognize its role is to assist states as they
pursue best-practice policies based on scientific evidence, not
undermine or counteract them." Danny Quah, professor of economics at
LSE, says in a statement. "If this alignment occurs, a new and effective
international regime can emerge that effectively tackles the global
drug problem."
The report specifically calls out the United Nations' 2016 General
Assembly Special Session on Drugs as an opportunity for countries to
press for global change. It wants them to ensure that the UN's narcotics
control board incorporates human rightsguidelines, works to expand
access to medications such as opioid substitution therapy, and doesn't
try to interfere with countries attempting to regulate marijuana. But
critically, the report concludes that a one-size-fits-all approach is
not working — it believes the UN can significantly help, but mostly, it
wants it to avoid impeding on countries' attempts to prioritize their
drug policies toward harm reduction and treatment.
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