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One Out Of 115 People Are In Jail In The U.s.a..


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Approximately 1 out of every 115 U.S. citizens is in jail.

 

Serbia has 1 in every 700 citizens in jail.

 

Do the math.

 

CN ON: Column: Portugal's Experiment With Drug Laws Is Paying

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URL: http://www.mapinc.or...1/n167/a02.html

Newshawk: Herb

Votes: 0

Pubdate: Thu, 10 Mar 2011

Source: Guelph Mercury (CN ON)

Copyright: 2011 Guelph Mercury Newspapers Limited

Contact:male2('editor','guelphmercury.com'); editor@guelphmercury.com

Website: http://news.guelphmercury.com/

Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1418

Author: Daniel Akst

 

PORTUGAL'S EXPERIMENT WITH DRUG LAWS IS PAYING OFF

 

Imagine a country so fed up with its ineffective crime-and-punishment approach to drug abuse that it decriminalizes the possession of small amounts of narcotics for personal use.

 

At the same time, it launches a concerted effort to provide treatment for addicts instead of just throwing them in prison. Surely such a naive land would see a sharp increase in drug use, and perhaps a generation of youth blighted by easy access to mind-altering substances. But in Portugal, which is just such a country, that's not what happened.

 

Drug use does seem to have gone up, but this increase may well be illusory--and rather harmless. What's not illusory, on the other hand, is the sharp reduction in the ills associated with drug abuse. Nine years into its courageous experiment with sanity as a national drug policy, Portugal is indisputably better off. And it's getting some well-earned attention for its efforts.

 

Policy-makers in some other western countries, including the U.S., ought to pay especially close attention, given the colossal futility of its own endless "war on drugs" -- for never has a cure been so much more catastrophic than the disease it was intended to remedy.

 

With 2.3 million inmates, the United States now has the largest prison population in the world -- and the highest per capita rate of incarceration as well.

 

Absurd American drug laws play a big part in this: a quarter of U.S. inmates are nonviolent drug offenders. Incarceration is expensive -- in New York, it costs about $45,000 per inmate annually, not counting pensions and other benefits for prison staff. Americans can no longer afford to lock up so many of its citizens, and so now there is pressure all over the U.S. to cut the number of prisoners.

 

This makes the Portuguese experience particularly noteworthy at the moment. A study in the British Journal of Criminology by Caitlin E. Hughes and Alex Stevens lays it all out. The bad news is that, as you might expect, the price of drugs in Portugal has fallen since the reforms, and there has been some increase in drug use among adults. But neighboring Spain, which didn't change its laws, also saw an increase in drug use. And the finding in Portugal may simply reflect users' greater willingness to admit their indulgence to pollsters since the law's relaxation.

 

Even if the increase is real, it doesn't much matter, because the harms associated with drug abuse are so much diminished. Before decriminalization, for example, Portugal had the highest rate of drug-related AIDS in the European Union. But in the years since, the infection rate has plunged thanks to syringe programs, methadone and outreach efforts. Overdose deaths are down, and more addicts are in treatment. As to prisons: Since the new law, arrests for crimes related to drugs have fallen by almost two-thirds. Prisons fell from 119 per cent of capacity to 102 per cent. And the proportion of prisoners incarcerated for drug-related crimes was halved.

 

A key factor in Portugal's success: treatment and dissuasion ( via counselling, community service and other measures ) have been integral parts of its drug reforms from the outset. Portugal's, in other words, was a comprehensive reform. The Portuguese experience should embolden others to try something equally sensible.

 

The American war on drugs is a costly failure on a larger scale than was Prohibition, with ramifications far beyond U.S. borders. We'll never eliminate drugs for the simple reason that too many people like them. But it's time to figure out a way to decriminalize narcotics, at the very least, even while firmly discouraging their use.

MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.

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