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1996-05-06
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From: brucel@zulu.sps.mot.com (Bruce A. Loyer H2-451)
In article <1991Feb14.232523.559@Neon.Stanford.EDU> rwilson@cs.stanford.edu writes:
>What I need: references to articles, in the popular or scientific press,
>that give facts about addict, user, and crime rates in the Netherlands as a
>result of their decriminalization efforts, or that argue that it has been a
>success. The same thing would be useful for Alaska.
I can give you pointers to a couple on the Netherlands:
A study of marijuana use by adolescents and young adults was undertaken
in 1985 by the Foundation for the Scientific Study of Alcohol and Drug
Use. The Dutch government requested the research as a result of
international disapproval of their liberal marijuana policy. This
disapproval was reflected in the United Nations International Narcotics
Control Board's demand of the Dutch for an explanation of their policy.
The two countries that protested the Dutch policy the most were Norway
and the Federal Republic of Germany, both with distinctly repressive
drug policies.
The report, entitled "The use of Drugs, Alcohol and Tobacco" surveyed
1300 people aged 15 to 24 years in the Netherlands about their use of
various drugs.
(I don't know if that is enough to help you find the article, but it
is all I've got on that one.)
An article published closer to home is:
["The San Francisco Examiner", Sunday January 21, 1989, p.10 (without perm.)]
=============================================================================
Holland's pragmatic drug policy working
Former skeptics take a second look by Lance Gay
Meanwhile, a book on the subject is:
Cannabis in Amsterdam: a geography of hashish and marijuana
by: Adriaan C.M. Jansen
Published by Coutinho, Muiderberg, Netherlands
ISBN 90 6283 802 2
I have summaries and such on-line if you would like them.
-Andrew Bell
bell@cs.unc.edu
=============================================================================
From: civl097@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs,sci.med
Subject: Liberal marijuana policy vindicated
Message-ID: <1991Nov19.153220.2931@csc.canterbury.ac.nz>
Date: 19 Nov 91 02:32:20 GMT
From the Christchurch "Press" 18 November 1991 (from the "Daily Telegraph")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
NETHERLANDS DRUGS POLICY 'VINDICATED' BY NEW STATISTICS
Amsterdam's tolerant policies on drugs have been vindicated by new statistics
on the spread of AIDS and narcotics abuse, say health officials in the
Netherlands.
Amsterdam's authorities permit the use of soft drugs and freely distribute
clean needles among intravenous drug users with doses of methadone, which can
be used as a substitute for heroin.
The city's liberal line has been condemned for 20 years by narcotic experts
abroad. But figures now show that only 9 per cent of AIDS virus carriers in
Holland are intravenous drug users, compared with an average of 30 per cent
in the rest of Europe.
Drugs-related crime rates are also very low in Amsterdam compared with other
European cities, and the percentage of young drug users is decreasing fast.
The latest surveys show that 4 per cent of Dutch addicts are under 21. Seven
years ago, the figure was 14 per cent.
Mr Eddy Engelsman, head of the Health Ministry's drugs department, said:
"The American war on drugs is a failure. We are in favour of a pragmatic
policy, and statistics show that we are on the right path. We have applied
drugs policy based on harm reduction for the past 20 years. Our ideas were
still regarded as lunacy years ago. But the urgency to combat the spread of
AIDS has finally proved us right."
Mr Englesman is critical of foreign scare tactics, such as the British slogan:
"Heroin screws you up". He believes they can actually increase temptation
among teenagers to try hard drugs.
"Abroad, drug addicts are often seen as dangerous monsters, with whom it is
impossible to have a coherent conversation. We treat them as responsible
people," he said. Drugs campaigns concentrate on Hollands 7000 addicts and
especially 3000 intravenous drug users. Mr Ernst Bening, a psychologist at the
Amsterdam drugs department, said: "We treat drug users like patients not
criminals."
The Amsterdam approach benefits from almost unanimous political support in the
Hague, even though it costs more than 60 million pound (approx $NZ180 million)
a year. Mr Buning says the money is well spent. Amsterdam health officials
have been able to advise personally 80 per cent of the city's addicts, compared
with similar figures in the United States of 10 to 20 per cent.
The first point of contact is the "methadone bus", which drives around the
city distributing daily doses of methadone to registered drug users.
Mr Hans Robilns, who works on the bus, said" "We don't ask questions, but we
can talk to the patients and advise them on AIDS prevention or direct them to
further assistance."
However, some politicians fear the Amsterdam approach could lead to Holland
becoming the "social dustbin" of the European community when internal frontiers
are abolished next year.
- The "Daily Telegraph"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brandon hutchison,University of Canterbury,Christchurch
New Zealand