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Comparative Analysis of Marijuana Policy in the United States and the Netherlands:. Questioning the Continuing Validity of the U.S. Approach.
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Comparative Analysis of Marijuana Policy in the United States and the Netherlands: Questioning the Continuing Validity of the U.S. Approach
The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not sufficient warrant. John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, 1859.
Presentation Overview • History of Marijuana Policy in the US • Current Status of the War on Drugs • History of Marijuana Policy in the Netherlands • Current Status of Decriminalization • Policy Implications for the US • Arguments against decriminalization • Public Opinion
History of Marijuana Policy in the United States • Federal Bureau of Narcotics formed in 1930 • Propaganda campaign against marijuana • It is alleged that the FBN Commissioner, Harry Anslinger, directed a propaganda campaign against marijuana to secure funding for the fledgling agency • Enlisted the help of Hollywood and media • In response 27 states outlawed use and possession of marijuana within just a few years • This set the stage for the Marijuana Tax Act
US History Cont. • 1937 Marijuana Tax Act • In order to legally cultivate, sell or possess marijuana an individual would have to apply for and receive a stamp indicating they had paid a tax on the activity • Control over marijuana was maintained by not approving any applications
US History Cont. • Legislative History: Testimony • Harry Anslinger, FBN Commissioner: • marijuana was worse than opium • Clinton Hester, Assistant General Counsel, Dept. of the Treasury: • marijuana causes insanity and death • Dr. William Woodward, Legislative Counsel, American Medical Association: • Stated that there was no evidence that marijuana was dangerous to users or caused them to be dangerous • Questioned why Bureau of Prisons data did not back these claims
US History Cont. • 1970 Comprehensive Drug Abuse and Control Act • Consolidated previous federal drug laws • Created the Drug Enforcement Agency • Enforcement budget increased from $86 million in 1969 to nearly $800 million in 1974 • President Nixon declares a “war on drugs”
US History Cont. • 1970s: Experimentation with Policy • Nixon formed the National Institute on Drug Abuse Research • Also supported methadone treatment for heroin addicts • 12 States decriminalized possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use
US History Cont. • 1988 Anti-Drug Abuse Act • Created minimum sentencing guidelines for drug violations • Mainly in response to the emergence of crack cocaine • Enforcement budget increased to $20 billion by 1998 • The “Just Say No” era
US: Current Status • Use of Marijuana • Marijuana is the third most popular recreational drug after alcohol and tobacco • US Dept. of Health and Human Services • 70 million Americans have tried marijuana • 18 million have smoked marijuana in the last year • ACLU • 34% of voters surveyed had smoked marijuana • American Journal of Public Health • Criminalization does not deter marijuana use
US: Current Status • Effect of Prohibition • 59% reduction in use of marijuana from 1979 to 1993 • 25% of all drugs entering the US are interdicted • Cost of Prohibition • 12,000% increase in enforcement budget from 1979 to 1993 • Current Funding • $37.1 billion, $10 billion spent on marijuana enforcement
US: Current Status • Social Impact of Prohibition • 6.5 million people incarcerated on marijuana charges from 1994 to 2004 • More people than the combined populations of Alaska, Delaware, DC, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming • 800% increase in the arrest rate from 1980 to 2000 • 88% for simple possession • Only 1 in 18 of those results in felony conviction, remaining are adjudicated as misdemeanors or dismissed • Accounts for $4 billion of the $10 billion budget • Enforcement now focused on users
US: Current Status • Percent of prison population incarcerated for drug offenses • 1970: 16% • 2000: 54%
History of Marijuana Policy in the Netherlands • Post WWII some use of marijuana • Simple possession punished by up to 3 months incarceration and fine • 1960-1970 • Dramatic rise in marijuana use as a recreational drug (also heroin, cocaine and other hard drugs) • Began to be viewed as a social and health problem • Public discourse became part of national legislative reaction • Concern for health risks and impact of criminalization on future executives and intellectuals
Netherlands History Cont. • Baan Working Party • Formed to analyze the pharmacological, psychological and social aspects of drug use • Analyzed drug use based on risk criterion • Neither all drugs nor all illegal drug consumption were to be considered equally dangerous • Realized drug use could not be eradicated, part of human condition • Made a unanimous decision to decriminalize marijuana • Contrast with legalization • Results of study used to amend the 1928 Opium Act
Netherlands History Cont. • Opium Act Reform of 1976 • Distinguishes between drugs that present an unacceptable risk (heroin, cocaine, LSD and amphetamines) and marijuana • Penalties for dealing in hard drugs increased and penalties for marijuana decreased • Sought to separate markets • Protect users of marijuana from contact with other hard drugs
Netherlands History Cont. • Opium Act • Possession of up to 30 grams of marijuana is a misdemeanor which results in a minimum of 1 month incarceration and a fine • Expediency Principle • 1976 Minister of Justice issued investigation and prosecution guidelines • Possession of less than 30 grams of marijuana given the lowest law enforcement priority • Normally no investigation or prosecution should be undertaken • Exception for individuals who are a public nuisance or commit other crime
Netherlands History Cont. • Legal sale of marijuana allowed • Commercial enterprises allowed to sell marijuana products as long as they do not: • Advertise • Sell hard drugs • Cause a public nuisance • Sell to minors or allow on premises • Sell more than 5 grams per transaction, per person, per day
Netherlands Current Status • Use of Marijuana • 17% have used marijuana at least once • Compare to 43% in US • 4.6% of population have used marijuana in the last year • Compare to 17% in US
Policy Implications for the US • Arguments Against Decriminalization • US Public Opinion
Arguments Against Decriminalization • Decriminalization will increase marijuana use • Marijuana use in the US is 26% higher than in the Netherlands • Half of 18 year olds in the Netherlands who try marijuana quit within a year • Rates of marijuana use during the last year in the Netherlands has declined from the 1970s, stabilizing at about 4-5%
Arguments Against Decriminalization • Marijuana is a gate-way drug • Heroin • Heroin addiction rate in the Netherlands is about 160 per 100,000 population • Heroin addiction rate in the US is about 415 per 100,000 population • Cocaine • 10.5% of US population has used cocaine, .7% have used cocaine in the last month • 2% of Netherlands population has used cocaine, .2 have used cocaine in the last month
Arguments Against Decriminalization • Decriminalization will increase drug related crime • Netherlands incarceration rate in 2002 was 100 per 100,000 population • US incarceration rate in 2002 was 701 per 100,000 population • Netherlands homicide rate in 2001 was 1.51 per 100,000 population • US homicide rate in 2001 was 5.56 per 100,000 population
Public Opinion in the US • 2002 CNN/Time Magazine poll • 51% think marijuana should not be legalized • 72% think marijuana should be decriminalized • 2004 Zogby poll • 46% think marijuana should be regulated like alcohol and tobacco
Discussion Topics • Constitutional issue raised in reading • Federal drug scheduling • Health risks for users • Paper suggestions • Comparison with alcohol/tobacco • Medical studies • Drug scheduling • Incarceration rates: effect on minorities