• Español
  • English
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • rss
  • Español
  • English
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • rss
TNI D&D
  • Home
  • About us
    • About us
    • People
    • Partners
    • Researchers
    • Contact us
    • In the media
    • Newsletter
  • Newsroom
    • Press contacts
    • Press releases
    • Resources
    • Drugs in the news
  • Issues
    • Drug policy debate in the Americas
    • Decriminalization
    • Proportionality of sentences
    • Harm reduction
    • Reclassification of substances
    • Safer crack use
    • Human rights
    • Regulation
    • Unscheduling the coca leaf
    • Ending the war on drugs
    • Alternative development
    • Cannabis
    • Producers of Crops
    • Law enforcement
    • ATS, Mild stimulants & NPS
    • European Drug Policy
    • Money Laundering
  • UN Drug
    Control
    • Conventions
    • UNODC
    • CND
    • INCB
    • UNGASS
  • Country
    information
    • Drug Law Reform on the Map
    • Central America
      • El Salvador
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Costa Rica
    • Latin America
      • Argentina
      • Bolivia
      • Paraguay
      • Brazil
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Ecuador
      • Peru
      • Uruguay
      • Venezuela
    • Mexico
    • Caribbean
      • Jamaica
      • Belize
    • Afghanistan
  • Events
    • Expert Seminars
    • Informal Policy Dialogues
    • Public Events
    • Judges for Law Reform
  • Publications
    • Drug Policy Briefings
    • Drug Law Reform
    • Legislative Reform Series
    • The Human Face
    • Drugs & conflict
    • Drugs and the Law (CEDD)
      • Systems overload
    • Drug Markets and Violence
  • Weblog

 

Call to Action: Support Global Drug Policy Reform

Call to Action
World Drug Day, 26 June 2009

As the United Nations launches the 2009 World Drug Report this week, more than 40 international groups and experts worldwide today issued a call to action that presses governments to adopt a humane approach to drug policy.

The call to action, signed by the Transnational Institute (TNI), the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, former president of Brazil Fernando Cardoso, and others, urges governments to enact policies that are based on scientific and medical research rather than politics.

Download the Press release
Download the Call to Action: Support Global Drug Policy Reform

For Immediate Release

Groups Put Pressure on Governments to Reform Harmful Drug Policies

Contact: Martin Jelsma, +31 20 662 6608 or +31 65 5715893, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Amsterdam, 25 June — As the United Nations launches the 2009 World Drug Report this week, more than 40 international groups and experts worldwide today issue a call to action that presses governments to adopt a humane approach to drug policy.

The call to action, signed by the Transnational Institute (TNI), the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, former president of Brazil Fernando Cardoso, and others, urges governments to enact policies that are based on scientific and medical research rather than politics.

“A world without drugs will never exist,” said Martin Jelsma, coordinator of TNIs drugs programme. “The principle of harm reduction should replace the ideology of ‘zero tolerance’. It offers a more pragmatic approach that favours policies capable of reducing drug-associated harm as far as possible, for the consumer and for society in general.”

Rather than receiving treatment, millions of non-violent drug users are languishing in prisons as a result of current drug policies. As the HIV and AIDS crisis spreads, policies that drive away drug users are creating public health disasters. The drug trade continues to grow while families are torn apart by the global war on drugs.

“Sanctions should be in proportion to the crime,” said Jelsma. “Many countries could learn from the positive example given by Ecuador, which issued a ‘pardon for mules’ in 2008. Those who had been arrested with a maximum quantity of two kilograms of any drug, who had no prior conviction, and who had completed ten percent of their sentence or a minimum of one year, were released from prison.”

It is time for governments to support needle exchange, substitution therapy, and decriminalization of possession for personal use. Drug control measures must respect human rights with penalties that are proportional and humane, and recognize that drug cultivation is primarily a development issue—not simply a security threat.

The call to action, along with full list of signatories, is available online.



TNI Drugs & Democracy programme is one of the leading international drug policy research institutes and as a serious critical watchdog on UN drug control institutions. Website: www.tni.org/drugs
  • Labels
    civil society | HIV/AIDS | world drug report | conventions | UNODC | human rights | UN drug control | harm reduction

Drugs in the News

  • Swiss capital city wants to test controlled sale of cocaine
    02.06.2023
  • Proposals for regulated cannabis market may end up in European Court, says official
    30.05.2023
  • Industry up in smoke?
    28.05.2023
  • Blow to red light tourists: cannabis smoking banned in public
    25.05.2023
  • Move over, CBD: HHC is the new ‘legal cannabis’ these European countries want to ban
    25.05.2023
  • ‘It will create a police state’: Dagga Party calls cannabis bill ‘fascist’
    23.05.2023
More news

Weblog

    Willful blindness: INCB can find nothing good to say on cannabis legalisationWillful blindness: INCB can find nothing good to say on cannabis legalisation
    14.03.2023
More weblog

Hilites

Balancing Treaty Stability and Change

balancing hilite

Inter se modification of the UN drug control conventions to facilitate cannabis regulation


Connecting the dots...

connecting dots hilite

Human rights, illicit cultivation and alternative development


Morocco and Cannabis

morocco cannabis hilite

Reduction, containment or acceptance


The Rise and Decline of Cannabis Prohibition

rise decline hilite

The History of Cannabis in the UN Drug Control System and Options For Reform


Tags

10-year Review  20 1998 UNGASS  26 2005 CND debate  8 2016 UNGASS  126 2019 HLM  5 activism  36 afghanistan  25 show all

Tags

10-year Review  20 1998 UNGASS  26 2005 CND debate  8 2016 UNGASS  126 2019 HLM  5 activism  36 afghanistan  25 hide
africa  13 albania  14 alternative development  120 alternatives to policing  2 amnesty  88 amsterdam  29 appellation of origin  3 argentina  32 asean  9 ATS  15 australia  105 austria  5 ayahuasca  6 bahamas  4 ballot 2012  155 banking  48 barbados  11 belgium  43 belize  10 bermuda  15 bhang  14 bolivia  118 brazil  94 brownfield doctrine  24 burma  45 california  214 cambodia  12 canada  533 cannabinoids  105 cannabis  3179 cannabis clubs  216 cannabis industry  406 caribbean  148 caricom  33 cbd oil  1 central america  5 chile  21 china  46 civil society  37 CND  130 coca  218 cocaine  88 coffee shop  227 cognitive decline  30 colombia  158 colorado  163 compulsary detention  19 conflict  4 conventions  276 corporate capture  57 corruption  4 costa rica  10 crack  54 craft cannabis  30 crime  86 czech republic  48 dark net  4 death penalty  3 decertification  1 decriminalization  916 deforestation  10 denmark  126 drug checking  41 drug consumption rooms  193 drug courts  22 drug markets  144 drug policy index  2 drug testing  7 drug trade  59 e-cigarettes  1 e-joint  2 ecstasy  68 ecuador  22 egypt  16 el salvador  2 environment  35 eradication  129 essential medicines  25 estonia  2 eswatini  7 ethiopia  3 european drug policy  109 expert advisory group  9 extrajudicial killings  95 fair trade  16 fentanyl  80 france  116 fumigation  27 gateway theory  29 georgia  3 germany  203 ghana  18 global commission  46 greece  19 guatemala  31 guatemala initiative  47 harm reduction  341 hemp  42 heroin  139 heroin assisted treatment  80 HIV/AIDS  61 home cultivation  112 honduras  3 human rights  258 ICC  1 illinois  10 incarceration  53 INCB  142 india  97 indigenous rights  1 indonesia  35 informal drug policy dialogues  22 inter se modification  17 iran  14 ireland  15 israel  63 italy  42 jamaica  173 japan  3 kava  4 kazakhstan  5 kenya  11 ketamine  27 khat  37 kratom  32 kyrgyzstan  1 laos  2 latin american debate  115 law enforcement  418 lebanon  43 legal highs  64 legalization  1662 lesotho  10 local customization  11 luxembourg  51 malawi  4 malaysia  7 malta  49 medical cannabis  654 mental health  44 methamphetamine  48 mexico  210 Mid-Term Review  1 mild stimulants  46 money laundering  54 morocco  126 naloxone  16 nepal  7 netherlands  331 new york  33 new zealand  67 NIDA  5 nitrous oxide  7 norway  18 NPS  10 opinion polls  131 opioids  150 opium  94 oregon  29 overdose kits  4 pakistan  9 panama  5 paraguay  4 pardon  2 patents  18 peace  24 peru  45 peyote  3 philippines  89 pilot project  128 pleasure  5 poland  2 police pacification  18 portugal  68 potency  2 precursors  7 prevention  3 prison situation  101 prohibition  152 proportionality  110 psychedelics  13 psychosis  55 puerto rico  3 racism  29 reclassification  119 recriminalisation  36 regulation  1406 russia  36 sacramental use  11 safe supply  32 safer crack  29 scheduling  27 scientific research  144 sdg  2 security  14 senegal  1 sentencing  67 singapore  7 social justice  79 somalia  7 south africa  83 spain  79 st lucia  9 st vincent and grenadines  31 substance-use disorder  20 substitution treatment  31 sweden  30 switzerland  152 synthetic cannabinoids  30 taxation  54 teen use  43 thailand  73 thresholds  60 tobacco industry  17 traditional growers  158 tramadol  17 treatment  28 trinidad & tobago  15 tunisia  14 UK  280 UN Common Position  1 UN drug control  444 UNGASS  58 UNODC  110 uruguay  146 US drug policy  1185 vaping  2 venezuela  5 vietnam  5 violence  134 WHO  66 world drug report  11 yemen  6

This website

UN Drug Control

In 2011 the 1961 UN Single Convention on drugs will be in place for 50 years. In 2012 the international drug control system will exist 100 years since the International Opium Convention was signed in 1912 in The Hague. Does it still serve its purpose or is a reform of the UN Drug Conventions needed? This site provides critical background.

Drug Law Reform on the map

dlronthemap_und

Copyright © 2016 Drug Law Reform in Latin America

Website by WebWolf