July 17, 2012 -Samuel Blackstone- Source: Business Insider
July 17, 2012
On July 1st, 2001, Portugal decriminalized every imaginable drug, from marijuana, to cocaine, to heroin. Some thought Lisbon would become a drug tourist haven, others predicted usage rates among youths to surge.Eleven years later, it turns out they were both wrong.
Over a decade has passed since Portugal changed its philosophy from
labeling drug users as criminals to labeling them as people affected by a
disease. This time lapse has allowed statistics to develop and in time,
has made Portugal an example to follow.
First, some clarification.
Portugal’s move to decriminalize does not mean people can carry
around, use, and sell drugs free from police interference. That would be
legalization. Rather, all drugs are “decriminalized,” meaning drug
possession, distribution, and use is still illegal. While distribution
and trafficking is still a criminal offense, possession and use is moved
out of criminal courts and into a special court where each offender’s
unique situation is judged by legal experts, psychologists, and social
workers.
Treatment and further action is decided in these courts, where
addicts and drug use is treated as a public health service rather than
referring it to the justice system (like the U.S.), reports Fox News.
The resulting effect: a drastic reduction in addicts, with Portuguese officials and reports highlighting that this number, at 100,000 before the new policy was enacted, has been halved in the following ten years. Portugal’s drug usage rates are now among the lowest of EU member states, according to the same report.
One more outcome: a lot less sick people. Drug related diseases including STDs and overdoses have been reduced even more than usage rates, which experts believe is the result of the government offering treatment with no threat of legal ramifications to addicts.
While this policy is by no means news, the statistics and figures,
which take years to develop and subsequently depict the effects of the
change, seem to be worth noting. In a country like America, which may
take the philosophy of criminalization a bit far (more than half of America’s federal inmates are in prison on drug convictions), other alternatives must, and to a small degree, are being discussed.
For policymakers or people simply interested in this topic, cases like Portugal are a great place to start.