Time to push the reset button on the drug war
Press Advisory
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Most Americans believe that their country’s forty-year “war on drugs” has failed. Yet, despite the costs and growing opposition to US antinarcotics strategy across Latin America, the US debate on drug policy remains muted. It is time now to end the silent tolerance of ineffective, socially harmful laws, institutions, and policies, and usher in a serious national discussion of how to reform US drug control strategies.
According to Rethinking US Drug Policy, a report released today by the Inter-American Dialogue, what is most needed now is a far-reaching debate on alternative approaches that could reduce the risks and damage from the trafficking and abuse of illegal drugs. The report proposes a series of US government initiatives that would set the stage for a thorough rethinking of US drug policy:
- Support recent Congressional initiatives to establish House and Senate commissions to review US anti-drug strategies and develop alternative approaches;
- Join with other nations to organize an inter-governmental task force on narcotics strategy that would review and appraise global drug policies;
- Revise outdated UN treaties that underpin the international narcotics regime;
- Expand data collection, analysis, and research on multiple aspects of drug problems and the policies and programs designed to address them; and
- Identify and scale up successful drug programs that promise to reduce drug addiction and the health risks to addicts, increase the prospects of rehabilitation, and decrease drugrelated crimes.
On February 10, the Inter-American Dialogue will hold a public discussion on the findings and recommendations of the report at an event on Capitol Hill.
Contact: Daphne Morrison (202-463-2563)
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