UNGASS
10-year review
Recent publications IDPC on the 2009 CND | Recent publications IDPC on the 2009 CND |
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A series of reports by the International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC) on the 2009 Commission on Narcotic Drugs and its High Level Segment, held in Vienna in March 2009.
IDPC Proceedings document on the 2009 CND and High Level Segment This proceedings document provides the reader with a summary of what happened at the 52nd session of the CND and its High Level Segment and offers an analysis of some of the key discussions and debates. * * * This Politcal Declaration and Action Plan are the versions presented to delegates when they arrived at the high level meeting on 11th March. They contain two significant amendments to the version agreed by member states on 3rd March - the addition of the words 'drug abuse' in paragraph 20 of the declaration, and the removal of the word 'considering' in paragraph 47(g) of the action plan. Both changes were made by the CND secretariat, that altered the meaning of those paragraphs towards wording favoured by certain member states. When challenged on these unauthorised changes, the secretariat claimed that they were simple editorial errors but, three weeks after the event, corrected versions have still not appeared on the UNODC website.' * * * IDPC Briefing paper: Why is the outcome of the United Nations drug policy review so weak and inconclusive? IDPC and other NGOs have followed the preparations for the 2009 CND closely, in particular the negotiation of the political declaration. We have been disappointed at the unwillingness of member states to meaningfully tackle the policy dilemmas arising from the lack of progress over the last 10 years. The dominant response to the crumbling consensus has been to claim reiterate existing commitments and strategies, and hope that they work better in the next decade. This briefing paper examines the political and institutional pressures that have led to such a weak conclusion. * * * IDPC Briefing Paper: Antonio Costas speech to the High Level Segment of the 2009 Antonio Costa, the Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), gave a speech to the High Level Segment of the 2009 Commission on Narcotic Drugs on the 11th March 2009. The speech drew heavily on a discussion paper published by the UNODC shortly before the meeting Organised Crime and Its Threat to Security (V.09-81081). This speech, and the paper on which it is based, continues a trend in which Mr Costa presents some interesting and helpful arguments that member states should seriously consider, but sometimes undermines the strength of his analysis with unnecessary rhetorical flourishes and the inaccurate use of data and evidence. Read the IDPC briefing here. * * * IDPC Advocacy Note: Civil Society Engagement - UN High Level Segment 2009 While it is clear that civil society has played a much greater role in this CND than has ever been the case previously, there is still a long way to go for the UNODC and CND to meet the standards set in other UN bodies and commissions. The Beyond 2008 initiative, and the work of networks such as the IDPC, ensured that the awareness, debates, and influence of NGOs was significantly improved for this review process. However, the support provided by the secretariat and member states was patchy at best, and this advocacy note calls for a much clearer commitment to constructive engagement in the future. Read the IDPC advocacy note here. * * * IDPC Advocacy Note: The Political Declaration - A missed opportunity The Political Declaration sets a framework and priorities for the next 10 years of international drug policy. IDPC and its members have followed with interest the process for reviewing progress against the objectives set at the General Assembly Special Session on Drugs in 1998 namely, to eradicate or significantly reduce the production of, and demand for, the non-medical use of controlled drugs. The conclusions of that review and the resulting declaration are deeply disappointing. There is an almost total unwillingness to confront the real policy dilemmas, and a series of increasingly surreal political and diplomatic battles over wording that are entirely disconnected from the reality of drug use and problems as experienced in the outside world. Read the IDPC advocacy note on the Politcal Declaration here.
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