Explore options for legal drugs markets As long as drugs are illegal and in demand, there will be crime, corruption, and violence resulting from the illegal trade. So there is an argument that legalizing drugs will make drugs safer, because governments rather than criminals will have control over the market. No drugs covered by the UN convention on drugs have yet been legalised and regulated, but we can learn from experiences with legal regulation of alcohol, tobacco and pharmaceutical drugs - as well as experiments with quasi-legal or medical cannabis/marijuana models.
The main worry is that legalizing drugs will cause a huge increase in drug use and the harms associated with it. In the Netherlands it is, in practice, legal to buy and sell small quantities of cannabis from coffee shops, yet they have a lower rate of cannabis use than many neighbouring countries, which rely much more heavily on police enforcement and prohibition.
A bigger test case is the tobacco market. Tobacco is a highly addictive and harmful drug, yet it is treated as a legal and regulated commodity. In recent years, western governments focused on reducing the demand for tobacco (rather than eradicating the supply, which is the normal method in the War on Drugs) by restricting its use (age limits, potency limits, and location of use limits) and putting emphasis on education and awareness. The results have been staggering: in the US the use of tobacco has declined by over 50%. Read More on reformdrugpolicy.com→
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