Since first coming to public prominence at the end of 2009, legal highs have posed a major challenge to existing legal and legislative structures designed to deal with drugs. With the market in manufactured psychoactive substances like mephedrone moving faster than public policy can accommodate, this report asks whether the assumptions enshrined in the 40-year-old Misuse of Drugs Act (MDA) are still valid when applied 21st century drugs market.
Download the report (PDF)
Bringing together stakeholders from across all areas involved in drugs policy - including frontline practitioners such as medical professionals, youth workers and law enforcement - Taking Drugs Seriously brings bold, innovative responses to an area too often dominated by stale rhetoric. The report points a way forward for public policy, taking account of the opportunities for new thinking presented by the challenges of the modern drugs market.
Key policy issues
The project highlighted that:
Implications for policy
The policy recommendations that emerged from the project suggest three broad principles for improving drug policy and a number of specific actions. The latter are in no way comprehensive but illustrate how a new approach might be used to identify ways to improve drug policy.
Focus on achieving outcomes on which there is consensus
We need to shift the focus of debate away from stale arguments about whether or not or how drugs should be classified to focus on the broader outcomes that policy is seeking to achieve, such as the desire to protect young people from the harms associated with drug use. Our project demonstrates that in this way it is possible to bring together people from different sides of the debate to agree on a range of actions that could improve the current situation; actions identified in the workshops have been incorporated here.
The following areas for action were identified:
Ensure a more balanced decision-making process and debate
There is a growing 'fault line' in the balance of decision making about the control of new drugs that leads to a system that is weighted in favour of the precautionary principle. This closes off proper consideration of the relative harms of particular substances and the harms that arise from banning these substances. It also hinders the consideration of alternative control measures. As a result, this bias may unintentionally increase overall harms.
We recommend that the Government:
Consider other regulatory options for control
There has been insufficient attention and discussion given to other control and regulatory mechanisms that have been used in the past for other comparable substances. These alternative control mechanisms could be utilised to respond to the challenge of new drugs. In the short term, the Government should:
In the longer term, Government and Parliament should:
In summary, it is 40 years since the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 became law and the 'drug problem' is no nearer being solved. The new psychoactive substances now being developed pose new challenges while at the same time our understanding of the problems associated with licit substances has grown. Therefore it seems high time for a new approach. The drugs debate is a hotly contested and polarised area and anyone entering it runs the risk of being characterised as being on one side or the other. However, it is clear that the 'drug problem' is complex and multi-faceted and there is no simple solution to it. We would suggest that it is time for a new approach to policy making, legislation and debate on drugs issues focusing on developing consensus and taking a more holistic view of substance use while building better evidence about what works.

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