How well do international drug conventions protect public health?
Volume 379, Issue 9810, pp. 84 - 91
January 7, 2011
 The Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs in 1961 aimed to eliminate the  illicit production and non-medical use of cannabis, cocaine, and  opioids, an aim later extended to many pharmaceutical drugs. Over the  past 50 years international drug treaties have neither prevented the  globalisation of the illicit production and non-medical use of these  drugs, nor, outside of developed countries, made these drugs adequately  available for medical use. The system has also arguably worsened the  human health and wellbeing of drug users by increasing the number of  drug users imprisoned, discouraging effective countermeasures to the  spread of HIV by injecting drug users, and creating an environment  conducive to the violation of drug users' human rights. The  international treaties have constrained national policy   experimentation because they require nation states to criminalise drug   use. The adoption of national policies that are more aligned with the   risks of different drugs and the effectiveness of controls will require   the amendment of existing treaties, the formulation of new treaties, or   withdrawal of states from existing treaties and re-accession with   reservations.
The Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs in 1961 aimed to eliminate the  illicit production and non-medical use of cannabis, cocaine, and  opioids, an aim later extended to many pharmaceutical drugs. Over the  past 50 years international drug treaties have neither prevented the  globalisation of the illicit production and non-medical use of these  drugs, nor, outside of developed countries, made these drugs adequately  available for medical use. The system has also arguably worsened the  human health and wellbeing of drug users by increasing the number of  drug users imprisoned, discouraging effective countermeasures to the  spread of HIV by injecting drug users, and creating an environment  conducive to the violation of drug users' human rights. The  international treaties have constrained national policy   experimentation because they require nation states to criminalise drug   use. The adoption of national policies that are more aligned with the   risks of different drugs and the effectiveness of controls will require   the amendment of existing treaties, the formulation of new treaties, or   withdrawal of states from existing treaties and re-accession with   reservations.


 
						


