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Review of
Swedish Drug Policy
*
2003
Ed. Henrik Tham
Stockholm
University
Department of Criminology
SE-106 91
STOCKHOLM
*The figure on the title page describes number of drug related deaths
as underlying or contributory cause of death in absolute numbers,
1969-2000.
Translation:
Dave
Shannon
Financial
Support:
Contents
Foreword
4
Presentation of the authors
5
Drug policy and trends in
problematic drug use in Sweden
5
Henrik Tham
Drug policy and crime
control
19
Per Ole Träskman
The results and
consequences of the compulsory treatment system
28
Mats Ekendahl
Sweden and Holland – two
drug policy models
33
Dolf Tops
Foolish dogmatism kills.
On substitution treatment
40
Markus Heilig
Drug policy and the
expansion of the prison system
47
Magnus Hörnqvist
The drug policy relevance
of drug related deaths
53
Leif Lenke and Börje Olsson
The drugs conventions and
drug policy of the UN
64
Henrik Tham
A drug free
Sweden?
71
Henrik Tham
The goal of Swedish drug policy is “a drug free society”. By setting
this objective,
Sweden has assumed a unique position
among European nations, adopting a total prohibition model and emphasising a
restrictive approach. At the official level, Swedish policy has been presented
as a success both in relation to the less restrictive policy previously followed
in
Sweden, and to the policies of other
countries.
The drugs question has once again become topical since levels of drug
use have risen sharply following an earlier decline. The Government has
appointed a special co-ordinator on drugs issues, who is now working under the
banner “Mobilisation against drugs”. The Government is also expected to furnish
a large amount of money for this mobilisation.
A number of academics and researchers have long been critical of
various aspects of Swedish drug policy. At the same time, the debate surrounding
this issue has been polarised and in a state of deadlock, which has made it very
difficult for those with alternative viewpoints to make themselves heard. In the
context of the new and more open situation prevailing at the present time, some
researchers wish here to present their views on Swedish drug policy. The authors
are wholly responsible for their own sections of the text.
Ed.
Mats Ekendahl Ph.D. works at the Department of Social Work at
Stockholm
University
Markus Heilig is Associate Professor at the Karolinska
Institutet and is head of the Research, Development and Education unit at the
University
Hospital at
Huddinge
Magnus Hörnqvist is a postgraduate research student at the Department of Criminology
at
Stockholm
University
Leif Lenke is Professor of criminology at
Stockholm
University
Börje Olsson is Professor of alcohol and drug policy at
Stockholm
University
Henrik Tham is Professor of criminology at
Stockholm
University
Dolf Tops Ph.D. works at the Department of Social Work at
Lund
University
Per Ole Träskman is Professor of penal law at
Lund
University
Developments in the control system
Swedish drug policy has been successful in reducing levels of
problematic drug use both over time and relative to that of other countries.
This is the official picture presented in political statements, government
inquiries, and the informational publications of public sector agencies.
According to these official statements, Swedish drug policy is successful as a
result of its restrictiveness. The term is used to refer to an intensive policy
agenda involving informational, treatment and control measures across a broad
front.
The success of drug policy has been questioned in relation to the
resources devoted to informational campaigns and treatment programmes. These do
not constitute the most controversial areas of drug policy however. Most of the
criticism directed against the drug policy practised in
Sweden has been
focused on the area of control, since here drug policy involves the use of
sanctioning and compulsion. Police interventions, prison sanctions and
compulsory treatment all constitute departures from the basic civil rights and
freedoms outlined in
Sweden’s Constitution. Interventions
of this kind against citizens, constituting as they do exceptions to the
freedoms and rights enjoyed by all, must therefore be specially authorised by
law. Compulsory measures might be justified if they were to clearly reduce the
risks for serious consequences that would otherwise affect the individual and
society. The compulsory measures employed in the context of drug policy must
therefore be assessed in relation to their effects on problematic drug use and
its consequences.
Since the end of the 1960s, there has been a substantial tightening
of the control related aspects of drug policy. Tableau 1 presents important
legislative changes that have taken place since the Drug Offences Act came into
force in 1968. The area covered by the criminal law has expanded throughout this
period. In addition, the application of the law has been tightened successively.
The number of police officers whose work is focused on drugs has increased
(Figure 1), the number of persons sentenced to a prison term for drug offences
has risen (Figure 2) and the proportion of drug users among those admitted to
prisons has also increased (Figure 3).[1]
The years around 1980 constituted a watershed for Swedish drug
policy. From this point, the objective became “a drug free
Sweden” and the
focus of drug policy shifted from the manufacturer and the dealer to the
individual drug user. The Prosecutor General introduced massive restrictions on
the opportunities available to prosecutors to issue cautions rather than to
prosecute for possessing drugs for personal use and the police began to focus
special resources on street-level operations under the slogan “it’s going to be
tough to be a drug abuser.”
Tableau 1. The evolution of drugs
legislation
1968 Prison
term for serious offences raised from 2 to max. 4 years
1969 Prison
term for serious offences raised to max. 6 years
Telephone taps allowed in connection with serious
offences
1972 Prison
term for serious offences raised to max. 10 years
1980
Tightening of praxis in relation to prosecutorial
cautions
1981 Prison
term for non-serious offences raised from 2 to max. 3 years
Prison term for serious offences raised from min. 1 to min. 2 years
1982 Act on
the Compulsory Treatment of Adult Drug Abusers
1983 Extension
of area covered by penal law
1985 Prison
term for minor drug offences raised to max. 6 months
1988
Criminalisation of personal consumption, max. sanction
fines
1989 Extension
of Care of Young Persons Act in relation to drug abusers
1993 Prison
term max. 6 months for personal consumption
1999 Extension
of criminalisation of synthetic drugs
Extension of Care
of Young Persons Act in relation to drug abusers
Zero limit for drugs while driving |
Figure 1. Number of police officers working
with drug crime 1965-2001.
Figure 2. Persons sentenced to prison for drug offences
1975-2001
Any assessment of the effects of Swedish drug policy must be based on
a number of measures of drug use. It is possible by means of such measures to
study pattern changes and also to make comparisons with other countries. The
indicators of the extent of drug use employed in analyses of the situation in
Sweden are self-reported drug use among school pupils and national service
conscripts, drug related illness and mortality, arrestees with needle marks,
estimates made by various public sector agencies of numbers of drug users, drug
seizures made by the police and customs services, persons convicted[2] of drug offences and numbers of
drug users in prison system institutions. These different indicators measure
somewhat different things and are of varying reliability. The indicators that
serve as direct measures of drug use may be regarded as more reliable than those
that describe responses to drug use, such as police and court data for example.
In combination, however, the various measures may provide a rough picture of the
relevant trends.
Since 1971, annual questionnaire surveys have been conducted among pupils in year 9 (aged 15). Figure 4
presents trends in the proportion of girls and boys respectively who report
having tried drugs, primarily cannabis.[3] The trend shows a gradual
reduction in the numbers trying drugs during the 1970s and through the early
1980s, with these numbers bottoming out between the mid 1980s and the beginning
of the 1990s. Thereafter there was a marked increase. Measuring drug use during
the last month provides a rather more sophisticated indicator than measures of
ever having tried drugs. The trend shown by this indicator is more or less the
same, however.
Figure 4. Proportion of youths in year nine who have used drugs
1971-2001,
by gender
One measure of the trends in drug use, available from as early as the
1960s, is based on the needle marks found for the first time among those
admitted to
Stockholm’s remand centre.[4] Following a substantial increase,
the number presenting needle marks fell sharply between the end of the 1960s and
the mid 1970s. Thereafter this number lay at a relatively stable level until the
beginning of the 1990s (after which point there are no longer data available).
Another characteristic of the trend in drug use in
Sweden is that
unlike the majority of countries, where heroin use came to dominate trends in
heavy drug use,
Sweden developed an amphetamines
problem. Heroin arrived on the scene in
Sweden in the mid 1970s. Since then
its use has increased and at the end of the century, the use of heroin and
amphetamines lay at similar levels as the dominant drugs used by heavy drug
users.
The use of measures based on the societal response to drug use, such
as the numbers convicted of drug offences, for example, may be misleading. First
and foremost, this measure may be regarded as reflecting the work the justice
system. Measures of this kind may however be used to study whether trends have
varied across different groups of drug users. The picture of persons convicted
of drug offences shows a fall in the number of young people being convicted,
aged between fifteen and twenty, from the early 1970s until the beginning of the
1990s (Figure 5).[5] At the same time, the number of
older individuals, aged 30 to 39, being convicted increases. Given that it seems
unlikely that the police should have decided to reduce their focus on young
people, the trends indicate a decrease in the number of young drug users over
time. This builds on the assumption that in general those who commit drug
offences are also drug users, and that drug use starts relatively early in the
life course. From the beginning of the 1990s, however, the number of young
people convicted of drug offences underwent a sharp increase whereas the upward
trend among the older group was broken.
Figure 5. Persons convicted of drug offences
1968-2001,
by age groups 15-20
and 30-39 years
Indicators of first time drug users should be kept separate from
those measuring the number of drug users in the population at a given time.
National estimates of the number of drug users show that numbers of heavy drug
users (intravenous users or those who use cannabis on a near daily basis)
increased from 15,000 in 1979, to 19,000 in 1992 and 26,000 in 1998.[6] Thus the increase here has been
substantial, and was particularly marked during the 1990s. In part this trend
reflects that fact that people who started using drugs when they were young have
continued to do so as they have grown older. Between 1979 and 1992, the average
age of drug users increased, and the influx of young persons into this group was
reduced. During the 1990s, however, it was not only the number of older drug
users that increased but also the number of younger ones. Trends in drug related
mortality also follow those in the number of heavy drug users (see Lenke &
Olsson in this volume).
Figure 6. Numbers of heavy drug users 1979,
1992 and 1998,
in total and aged 24 or
under
In summary, the number of individuals using drugs for the first time
increased dramatically during the 1960s only to decline during the 1970s,
reaching its lowest level during the 1980s. From the beginning of the 1990s, the number of
first time users once again increased. The number of heavy drug users in
Sweden has increased successively
since measures were first produced at the end of the 1970s. Despite this
increase at the aggregate level, the number of younger heavy users fell up to
the beginning of the 1990s. From this point on, however, the number of young
persons presenting heavy drug use has also increased.
The control system and trends in drug use
One might then pose the question: Do the available indicators of
trends in drug use suggest that Swedish drug policy, and in particular the
control measures employed, has been successful?
The dramatic increase in the number of drug users during the 1960s
can also be seen in several other countries, and thus has nothing to do with
Swedish drug policy. An experiment conducted with legal prescriptions in
Stockholm
between 1965-67 is of interest in relation to the drug policy debate of the
time. The experiment, which involved doctors providing a small group of drug
users with generous access to amphetamines, has since been put forward
repeatedly as a reason why Swedish drug policy cannot be liberalised.[7] Critics regarded the legal
prescription of amphetamines as catastrophic, in particular because the
prescribed drugs were spread extensively to persons not included in the
experiment. A closer analysis of the experiment does not, however, indicate that
it had any directly negative consequences. Levels of crime did not increase
among those included in the experiment, and levels of mortality were no
different from those among other drug users. The sharp increase in the number of
intravenous drug users in
Stockholm began several years prior to the
start of the experiment. The number of prescriptions for amphetamines was also
far too low to have had any major impact on the number of drug users in
Stockholm.[8]
During the years 1968 to 1972, the severity of sanctions for serious
drug offences was increased dramatically. The other chief characteristic of drug
policy during the 1970s was that the drug user was not to be punished.
Possession of small amounts for personal consumption led to a caution issued by
the prosecutor, whilst heavy drug users were offered treatment. Despite the
absence of more intrusive measures, the available indicators suggest that the
numbers of people starting to use drugs fell over the course of this decade –
the number of fifteen year olds who had tried drugs was halved, and the number
of young people convicted of drug offences dropped even more steeply.
In the context of the wider debate, however, the 1970s came to be
characterised as the all-too-liberal decade, where a “laissez-faire” policy saw
drug use spreading to ever younger groups of users, and to an increasingly large
part of the country. The leading critic of the time, who would also come to have
a major influence on the direction drug policy was to take, claimed that drug
use was spreading like an epidemic and that the “ultra-liberal policy”
constituted a “Swedish tragedy”.[9]
As has been mentioned, from the end of the 1970s drug policy was
given a new direction with the goal now being the complete elimination of drug
use. Praxis shifted away from the issuance of cautions for minor drug offences,
and the number of police officers working with drug offences was increased at
the same time as the focus of resources was shifted towards the drug user on the
street.
The immediate effect of this tighter drug policy was that the number
of young people being convicted of drug offences increased for a couple of years
(see Figure 5). Thereafter, the decrease that had been witnessed since the 1970s
continued, but at a slower rate. The reduction in the number of young persons
convicted of drug offences was mirrored by a reduction in the number of young
heavy drug users included in the national estimates (see Figure 6). The figures
from the questionnaire surveys of fifteen year old and national service
conscripts also show a further drop in the numbers reporting having tried drugs.
The trends of the 1980s may be interpreted as indicating that the
more restrictive drug policy had an effect on the number of young people
starting to take drugs. For the most part, however, the decrease constitutes a
continuation of the trends witnessed during the “ultra-liberal 1970s”. At the
same time, the falling drug use among young people witnessed during the 1980s
mirrors a drop in levels of drunkenness in this same group. It is highly
unlikely that this trend has anything to do with drug policy. On the other hand,
it does coincide with alcohol policy measures introduced with the objective of
restricting drinking among young people. When drug use among youths increases
again during the 1990s, it is once again mirroring the trend in levels of
drunkenness.[10] This correlation might be
interpreted in different ways. Research clearly shows however that the use and
abuse of drugs is often preceded by excessive levels of alcohol consumption,
whilst the reverse is more uncommon.
During the 1980s, sanctioning levels were also increased in relation
to non-serious drug offences. The use of compulsory treatment was extended among
both young people and adults. The consumption of illicit drugs was criminalised
in 1988. The sanctioning scale for the consumption of drugs was extended to
include prison sentences in 1993, which also gave police the right to conduct
compulsory testing of bodily fluids. The objective of stiffening the sanctioning
system in 1993 was to give the police the “opportunity to intervene at an early
stage in order to forcefully prevent young people becoming hooked on drugs”.
Since the sanctions were stiffened, approximately 10,000 blood and urine samples
have been taken annually. The number of drug officers within the police force
has almost doubled during the 1990s (see Figure 1).
The intense focus on the use of criminal justice based measures
during the 1990s did not however lead to any reduction in the extent of drug
use. The various measures of drug trends instead indicate marked increases – the
number of fifteen year olds who have tried drugs, the number of young people
convicted of drug offences and the number of heavy users among young people
according to the counts conducted in 1992 and 1998. In addition, the police have
lowered the priority of measures focused on serious drug offences and
trafficking in relation to personal use. One third of the blood and urine
samples drawn from young people tested negative. An evaluation of the change in
the legislation conducted by the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention
emphasised the problems associated with the violations of personal integrity
that young people are subjected to by this kind of drug testing.[11]
The total number of heavy drug users presents a somewhat different
trend to that among first time drug users and abusers. The size of this group
has increased successively over the course of the 1980s and 1990s. Established
drug users do not seem to have been deterred by police or sanctions. Nor do the
substantial resources devoted to treatment programmes appear to have been able
to put a stop to the increase. The number of heavy drug users also increased
during the 1980s in spite of massive treatment efforts intended to meet the
threat posed by HIV.
It has been claimed both in a government inquiry and in the wider
debate that the substantial increase in the number of drug users witnessed
during the 1990s may in part be a result of a reduction in the level of
resources devoted to care and treatment measures.[12] There is no real evidence that
such a contraction in resources has in fact taken place, however. It is true
that an evaluation conducted by National Board of Health and Welfare indicates
that many local authorities appear to have made cut-backs within the drug
treatment sector at the beginning of the 1990s. The time spent in treatment also
appears to have become somewhat shorter. On the other hand, the costs incurred
by local authorities in relation to treatment programmes remained constant
during the mid 1990s. Institutional care programmes have been cut back, but
non-institutional programmes have been extended. In addition, the cuts in levels
of institutional care have for the most part been felt in relation to the
treatment of alcoholism.[13]
Even if there have been some cut backs in the level of care provision
for drug users, the question remains as to whether this can in fact explain the
increase in the number of heavy drug users witnessed during the 1990s. Cut backs
in the level of compulsory treatment are unlikely to have had any effect, since
they have not shown themselves to reduce levels of relapse into drug use.[14] One might also question the
existence of any form of treatment effect within the drug treatment sector.
According to a review of the research conducted by the National Board of Health
and Welfare, scientific follow-ups have not found evidence of any long term
treatment effects.[15]
This does not constitute an argument against treatment. It has a
major value in its own right as a means of care provision. Individual drug users
have been helped – and should continue to be given help – to stop using drugs.
Certain programmes have produced positive effects, others seem promising, and
the objective must of course be the development of effective methods of
treatment. The findings from research conducted to date, however, suggest that
the expectations we have of treatment approaches as a means of reducing levels
of relapse into problematic drug use should not be particularly high. Above all,
it seems unlikely that even extensive care resources would be able to have a
significant effect on the level of drug use and related trends over time.
Thus there do not appear to be any clearly identifiable links in
Sweden between changes in drug-related control measures and changes in patterns
of drug use. Levels of drug use and problematic drug use appear to have
developed relatively independently of penal and compulsory care based
legislation, levels of police resources, prison sentences and treatment efforts.
One might still argue that drug policy has been successful in that
the proportion of young people trying drugs has been and remains low in relation
to other western countries,[16] and that it is therefore
important to maintain the existing control focus in all areas of drug policy.
Having tried drugs, most commonly cannabis, is not in itself serious
nor does it constitute a social problem among young people. Occasional use is
said to be a serious matter, however, since it constitutes a stepping stone on
the way to heavy drug use. This assertion is one that deserves to be taken
seriously and also one that may be tested against the data. The background to
this hypothesis, which is widely held to be true in Sweden, is to be found inter alia in Swedish alcohol policy,
where the control of alcohol use has also had an effect on levels of alcohol
abuse. Sweden has been able to restrict the extent of alcohol related harms by
means of a restrictive alcohol policy, which employs age limits on the purchase
of alcohol, a state monopoly on alcohol sales, limited opening times, the
control of the bar and restaurant trade, high taxes and so forth. The positive
effects on levels of violence[17] and liver cirrhosis mortality
have been established both in a historical perspective and in relation to other
countries.
Unlike drugs, however, Sweden has never prohibited the use of
alcohol. The two markets are therefore quite different. The likelihood of moving
from having tried drugs to becoming a heavy drug user or from smoking cannabis
to the intravenous use of heroin or amphetamines is also subject to substantial
variations. In the
Netherlands, a significantly larger
proportion of young people have tried drugs and many more smoke cannabis than is
the case in
Sweden. The intravenous use of heavy
drugs is no more extensive in the Netherlands than in Sweden, however.[18] Very few of those who have tried
cannabis go on to try heroin too – in
Amsterdam and the USA, the proportion who do so has been reported to lie
at three and four per cent respectively.[19]
Even if occasional consumption did involve an increased risk for
heavy drug use, it is difficult to know how such occasional consumption might be
controlled. By devoting resources to testing urine samples and through a
dramatic increase in the number of convictions, attempts were made during the
1990s to prevent young people from starting to use drugs. In spite of these
efforts, however, both the proportion of young people who have tried drugs and
the proportion adjudged to be heavy drug users underwent substantial increases
during this same period.
The trends followed by heavy drug use are founded on other factors
than the numbers who have tried or who consume drugs on an occasional basis.
Heavy drug use is in essence tied to marginalisation and extreme hardship. This
is true at both the individual and societal levels. Studies have time and again
shown that heavy drug users to a much greater extent than others come from
impoverished homes, have experienced family conflicts, have had physical and
psychological health problems and have had done poorly in school – and all this
prior to their drug use.[20] Nor has there been a lack of
early interventions, inter alia in
the form of being taken into care and placements outside of the family home.[21] From a broader European
perspective, heavy drug use is also particularly extensive in countries
presenting high levels of unemployment.[22] In
Sweden, trends
in drug use among the young follow trends in levels of youth unemployment.[23]
Trends in heavy drug use are for the most part determined by the same
factors that give rise to alcohol abuse and criminal recidivism. Thus there are
no major differences between the measures required to deal with these different
phenomena. From a historical perspective, and by comparison with other
countries, penal sanctions and the use of compulsion do not appear to be methods
that have produced results; or as it has been expressed in an important book on
drug policy in
Scandinavia, Den Gode Fiende (The suitable enemy):
“We cannot punish our way out of major social problems. Collective solutions do
not sit very well in the shadow of
penal law. The war is lost. What is important now is that we do not
lose civilised society.”
Historical developments have led to a situation where drug policy and
crime policy have become interwoven. Ever since the 1960s, drug policy has been
characterised by a tough criminal law approach. Criminalisation and the use of
stiff penalties have constituted the primary means of controlling anything that
might be labelled “narcotics”. Any examination of drug policy must therefore
include an analysis of crime policy.
In
Scandinavia, sensible crime
policy – and as a part of this, sensible criminal justice policy – has often
been characterised using words such as “rational”, “homogenous” and “humanist”.
What the words rationality and homogeneity are intended to emphasise
is above all the requirement that all decisions must be based on a solid
fundament of fact (both empirical and legal) and must be subject to thorough
deliberation. All legislation takes as its point of departure the identification
and acknowledgement of a social problem. To justify attempting to resolve the
problem by means of the law, the problem must be both sufficiently serious, and
sufficiently difficult to resolve that informal solutions or decisions taken by
authorities at the executive level would not be adequate to the task. Thus
before legislative measures are taken, the nature of the problem must be
established and specified, and various possible alternative solutions must be
determined.[24] In the case of penal
legislation, there must in addition be very good grounds for criminalisation.
Criminalisation and penal sanctions can only constitute a justifiable solution
when other options are not sufficient.[25]
The requirement of humanism refers first and foremost to
the norms that apply to a trial in the criminal court, with the requirement of a
fair trial, including all the minimum guarantees for criminal court cases that
are implicit in internationally established human rights. But the demand for
humanism also presumes that the norms of the criminal justice system are non
discriminatory, and that the sanctioning system is not formulated so that
control by means of the criminal law causes more suffering than is absolutely
necessary. Above all else, this means that the necessary sanctioning level be
subject to careful consideration. There must be a reasonable balance between the
requirement of effectiveness and the requirements that follow from the fact that
the criminal law shall only be used as “ultima ratio” and then only to the
extent and in such a way as may be derived from a sanctioning ideology based on
justice.[26]
Penal legislation is therefore always tied to three questions: should
a certain act be criminalised at all? How should the act being criminalised be
described and defined? And how severely should the criminalised act be
sanctioned?
When it comes to the criminalisation of drugs, the answers to these
three questions are often taken for granted. Criminalisation should always be
used, the criminalisation should be applied sufficiently broadly as to encompass
the handling of drugs in any and all its forms, and the sanctions should be
severe. But how well does this in fact correspond to the requirements of good
crime policy? Let us begin by taking a brief look at historical developments.
Up until the 1960s, drug use was chiefly defined as an individual
problem, which was somewhat more concentrated within certain social groups.[27] This all changed radically
during the 1960s, leading to amongst other things a specific Penal Law on
Narcotics (1968:64). The Law had two primary objectives. The first was to
emphasise the seriousness of drug use and to make it clear that it constituted
an unwelcome problem that would be aggressively opposed. The second was to
differentiate between those who trafficked in and distributed drugs on the one
hand and those who used them on the other. The Law was not intended to hit the
drug users, but rather the idea was to reduce the supply of narcotics by means
of intensive, criminal law based controls focused on those who supplied and
distributed drugs. The maximum tariff for drug offences was fixed at four years
imprisonment, and this maximum level (which was regarded as being on the high
side) was motivated by reference to a putative
preventive effect on serious drug crime and drug trafficking. After only
a year, however, this maximum tariff was increased to six years imprisonment.[28]
The maximum sanction was increased again just a few years later. This
occurred in connection with a “Nordic merry-go-round” of similar measures.
Between 1970 and 1972, the drugs legislation was tightened in
Finland,
Norway and
Sweden. In the process, the maximum
penal tariff for serious drug offences in
Finland was
raised to ten years imprisonment. The motivations included reference to the fact
that plans were afoot in both
Norway and
Sweden to raise
the maximum sanction to just this level. Not long afterwards, the maximum
sentences were increased to ten years imprisonment in both
Norway and
Sweden. Here the motivation was that
these countries could not have a lower maximum tariff than that in effect in
Finland.[29]
Drug controls were tightened further at the end of the 1970s. From
this point on, the official objective of the control policy was to bring about a
“drug free society”. Of the agencies, parties or organisations active in this
area, there is hardly a one that has not employed this goal formulation. The
objective is still defined in this way today[30], although the Government has
stated in a paper to Parliament that this general and visionary objective may be
broken down into three measurable components: reducing the level of recruitment
into drug use, increasing the numbers desisting from drug use and restricting
the supply of narcotics.[31]
One thing that may be said to distinguish Swedish drug control is the
way a choice has been made to take a “tough” line at all levels. The war on
drugs is to be won by means of a straight, uncomplicated and resolute battle. No
reason is seen for differentiating between softer and harder drugs. The risks
associated with softer drugs have even been regarded as greater than those of
the harder substances, since softer drugs are perceived as a stepping stone
towards heavy drug use.[32]
One essential element in the battle against drugs is the
criminalisation of the consumption of drugs. Drugs have been compared with a
virus that can strike anyone, and this virus must therefore be stopped using any
and all available means, but above all through severe criminal justice
measures.[33]
Until the 1980s, the application of the drugs legislation was
intended to avoid obstructing or preventing drug users from entering treatment.
Control efforts were to be focused on producers, suppliers etc. During the
1980s, this approach started to be called into question in the context of a
heated debate. Should control measures primarily be focused on more serious drug
crimes or on the drug user?[34] A decisive step towards this
latter alternative, i.e. focusing control on the drug users, was taken when the
personal consumption of drugs was criminalised in 1988. The relevant Bill
emphasised that drug policy had to be formulated in such a way as to make it
clear that society takes a negative view of drugs and drug use. In addition, it
was felt that criminalising personal consumption would have a preventive effect,
particularly among youths. Further emphasis was placed on the importance of
adopting a uniform approach within the Nordic countries. And the personal
consumption of drugs was already sanctionable according to Norwegian and Finnish
legislation.[35]
In the preliminary work conducted in association with the legislative
change that criminalised personal consumption in 1988, three principal arguments
against criminalisation were discussed: penalising an action directed against
the perpetrator’s own person conflicts with a liberal Swedish tradition (where
not even suicide or assisting suicide are criminalised); the effective
enforcement of the criminalisation would require a level of resources not
available to the police (the questions of the police’s right to take urine and
blood samples when there was a suspicion of drug use, and the question of the
evidentiary value of such samples, were particularly sensitive); the fear of
punishment might lead drug users to avoid seeking treatment. This last issue was
resolved by means of a special freedom from liability clause whereby a drug user
could avoid criminal responsibility if he or she submitted to treatment for
their drug dependency.[36] In 1988 the penalty for personal
consumption was fixed at a fine.
The controversial aspects of criminalising personal consumption and
of the possibility of allowing for urine testing where there is a suspicion of
drug use have been described by the Supreme Court Justice Staffan Vängby in the
following way:
I can take a couple of examples from my own experience as an
investigator [of evidentiary difficulties that will arise in connection with a
new criminalisation]. The one related to the criminalisation of the consumption
of drugs. In the Drugs Inquiry of 1982 we coined the phrase that if drug
consumption was criminalised we would be up to our knees in urine. The
politicians failed to resist the pressure of public opinion and we ended up with
what we’d anticipated. It became a means for the police to show their
effectiveness by arresting known drug users without this having the slightest
practical effect as far as I can understand. Quite the reverse, such simple
police measures take resources away from areas that may have a real significance
in relation to drugs, including amongst other things the investigation of
trafficking on the streets.[37]
In 1993, the severity of the sanction for personal consumption of
drugs was raised with the inclusion of a prison term of up to six months in the
sanctioning scale. The objective was to “provide opportunities to intervene at
an early stage in order to forcefully prevent young people getting caught in
drug use, and to improve the treatment of drug users serving sentences.”[38] The arguments for increasing the
severity of sanctions were primarily the following: The penal tariff for
personal consumption (a fine) was too low by comparison with other minor drug
offences, particularly possession. With the introduction of a prison term into
the sanctioning scale, the police were given the opportunity to conduct body
searches in the form of urine and blood tests, when there was a reasonable
suspicion of drug use. The introduction of a prison term into the sanctioning
scale also made it possible for treatment based sentences to be passed in
connection with drug use. This improved the treatment opportunities available to
drug users. At the same time, however, the special freedom from liability rule
for drug users voluntarily seeking treatment was revoked. The general rules
relating to waivers of prosecution were deemed to be sufficient in such cases.[39]
In connection with the criminalisation of personal consumption, the
police were given extended powers of control besides those relating to body
searches. All these increased police resources were in fact to a large extent a
result of the police’s own political activity. Prior to the raising of the penal
tariff, which allowed the police to take urine and blood samples where there was
good reason to suspect a person to be under the influence of drugs, the police
had requested that they be given this power on a number of occasions. Without
the ability to take urine and blood samples, they claimed, the evidence required
to make a criminalisation of personal consumption effective would not be
forthcoming. The demand for increased control opportunities was one of the
points made in the drugs manifesto produced by the National Police Board in
1989. One of the mottoes of this manifesto, which was repeated in several other
contexts as well, was that it should be “tough to be a drug user”. The
opportunity to take urine and blood samples when a person was suspected of
having taken drugs was something that would be used precisely to make things
tough in this way.
The effects of the extended powers granted to the police are
described in a report produced by the Swedish National Council for Crime
Prevention on the efforts made by the justice system to combat personal drug
use. The report clearly shows the way that this particular type of anti-drugs
activity has been given an ever higher priority:
Slightly over 70 per cent of all police authorities report that
measures to combat drug use are one of the goals in the area of drug crime.
Almost half reported having specified goals relating to a certain number of
urine and blood tests being taken. Measures against serious drug offences do not
appear as often as prioritised goals …, despite the fact that the countywide
units, which primarily focus on combating serious drug crime, are included in
the presentation. One third of the police authorities report that their
objectives include taking measures to combat serious drug offences. Only two
police authorities have specified productivity targets relating to how may
serious drug offences should be investigated.[40]
The report summarised the trend in the number of recorded drug
offences in the following way:
The number of reported drug offences has increased dramatically since
the mid 1970s. As a result of changes to prosecutorial praxis and intensified
measures against street trafficking at the beginning of the 1980s, there was an
increase in the number of reported offences relating to possession and
consumption. The substantial increase in the number of reported drug offences
after 1993 may be explained by the increased opportunities made available to the
police to apply the legislation against the consumption of drugs. Judging by the
trend in reported drug offences, police measures have become more focused than
they were before on possession and personal consumption. In 1999, the personal
consumption category accounted for slightly over 40 per cent of the total number
of reported drug offences. A similarly large proportion related to possession.
Transfers of drugs comprised approximately fifteen per cent.[41]
The conclusions drawn by the report of the National Council for Crime
Prevention can be summarised in a few short sentences.
Over recent years the police have increasingly clearly prioritised
minor drug offences, of which personal consumption offences constitute a
substantial proportion. Urine and blood testing has comprised an essential part
of these control activities, with these tests being focused increasingly often
on younger individuals. This has also resulted in a substantial increase in the
number of persons convicted of minor drug offences.
This short description of the trends in drug controls also allow us
to present a picture of the situation as it stands at present. This picture is
completely dominated by the criminalisation of the personal consumption of
drugs, of severe sanctions, i.e. usually a prison term for all drug offences
with the exception of personal consumption and the possession of small amounts
of drugs[42] and an “aggressive” approach by
the police. The police efforts directed against drug users in particular are
based on the use of trite scare-tactics, with the extensive use of urine and
blood testing constituting an essential component to this end. The personal
integrity of individuals is interfered with deliberately with a “punitive
objective” in mind. The question then arises: is this kind of drug policy
sensible, and does it represent a crime policy approach that might be
characterised using the words rational, homogenous and humanist? In a Government
Bill aimed at improving the effectiveness of the way in which criminal cases are
processed (prop. 1994/95:23) the Government made the following
assessment:
Criminalisation as a means of attempting to prevent the breach of
various societal norms should be employed with caution. The justice system
should not be encumbered with such behaviours as are not regarded as being
particularly reprehensible. Neither is criminalisation the only, nor always the
most effective means of combating unwanted behaviours. The public resources
devoted to combating crime should be concentrated on forms of conduct that may
give rise to significant injury or danger and that cannot be dealt with by other
means.
Much of the activity related to the handling of drugs is clearly
deserving of punishment. This is also something that is clearly manifested in
the international conventions on narcotics, particularly in the UN’s convention
on drug offences (United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, adopted on December 19th 1988).
But this need not include everything. It need not for example include the
personal consumption of drugs, or possession for personal
use.
Different countries have resolved the issue of criminalising the use
of drugs in different ways. This is true even within
Scandinavia, where
Denmark has
consciously chosen not to penalise personal consumption. It is difficult to
build a picture of the international situation, inter alia because in certain countries,
whilst personal consumption does not constitute a crime, the user may still be sentenced for possession,
whereas in other countries personal consumption may be sanctionable by law, but
is not prosecuted in practice.[43] Within the EU, joint legislative
measures to criminalise the personal consumption of drugs have not been deemed
necessary. In the proposal for a Framework Decision that the Commission has
produced relating to the minimum rules for criminal acts in connection with
illicit drugs trading and associated sanctions, acts exclusively committed in
connection with personal drug use have been expressly excluded (proposed Article
2 paragraph 2, in the proposal of the 23rd May 2001 by comparison
with the proposal of the 30th November 2002).
There are several arguments that might be put forward against the
criminalisation of the personal consumption of drugs.[44] There are also certain arguments
that might be adduced in favour of such a course of action. It is certain,
however, that progress could be made towards a more rational and humane drug and
crime policy by decriminalising personal consumption, including the possession
of small amounts for personal consumption.
Decriminalisation may be motivated by reference to rationality: drug abuse problems cannot
be resolved effectively by means of penal law; the focus of the existing control
structure has gone astray and it is not particularly effective. Control measures
other than penal sanctions would be more effective over the long term in dealing
with the health and order-related problems related to the personal consumption
of drugs. Decriminalisation can also be motivated by reference to homogeneity: in liberal societies there
is very little room for the criminalisation of self-destructive behaviours or of
behaviours that are in fact merely a manifestation of something that is
perceived as immoral by certain people. But the foremost motivation for
decriminalisation relates to its humanity. Drug users should not be
placed under stress and treated like people from an alien and unwanted world. As
Professor Johs. Andenaes, who is also an advocate of decriminalisation, has put
it “amongst other things, it’s a question of justice and humanity in relation to
a group of people with major problems”.[45] The Swedish policy of
pressurising drug users is not in the least bit just. It is therefore not worthy
of anybody’s support.
I made the following assessment of penal drug policy in a different
context:
Penal drug policy does not correspond … to the form of crime policy
that has otherwise officially been accepted as correct. When formulating penal
drug policy, people have either neglected to carry out an honest analysis of the
harm and reprehensibility of the different drug-related activities, or have
alternatively neglected to accept and respect the results produced by such
analyses. Nor has anyone openly weighed alternative models of action against one
another in order to choose the one that appears most sensible. What has been
done, on the other hand, is to clearly formulate a political objective (“a drug
free society”), and at the same time to declare that this objective will be
achieved by means of criminal justice measures. This means that no attention has
been paid to the limitations of the criminal justice based control system. A
decision has been taken to reach an objective using means that are not
realistic, and the correctness of this decision has then been stubbornly
maintained.[46]
I still stand by this assessment. A new assessment would first
require a shift in drug controls and thereby also a shift in the crime policy
being pursued in the drugs arena. A good first move in this direction would be
to decriminalise the personal consumption of drugs, including possession for
personal consumption.
In
Sweden, the Care of Abusers (Special
Provisions) Act (1988:870), also known as LVM, has been in force since the
beginning of the 1980s. The Act decrees that substance abusers may be compelled
against their will to spend time at specific LVM institutions for a maximum of
six months. The objectives of such compulsory interventions are to ensure the
individual’s survival by interrupting acute forms of drug abuse and motivating
the individual to continue into voluntary treatment, and to promote long term
rehabilitation.
Since the mid 1990s, the number of persons being placed in care in
accordance with the LVM Act has fallen continuously.[47] This lead legislators to
establish a commission of inquiry in 2002 with the task of investigating the
causes underlying the change in the way the law is applied.[48] The Inquiry’s conclusions are
expected to be published in 2003. Recently, the Parliamentary Auditors also
published the findings from an independent inquiry into the way in which the
National Board of Institutional Care (SiS) carries out its task as the agency
responsible for the compulsory institutional care of both drug abusers and
youths. The report criticises SiS for a lack of external supervision, for not
conducting adequate follow-ups of its work and for employing treatment methods
whose effectiveness may be called into question.[49]
Thus at present, a discussion is being conducted, primarily at the
political level, as to whether LVM works and is being used in the way that was
intended when the Act was formulated. One thing that is conspicuous only by its
absence, not only in governmental inquiries, but also in the directives issued
to relevant committees and in the media statements made by those in power, is
the willingness to question whether compulsory treatment constitutes a necessary
and valuable component in society’s management of the drug dependency problem.
Instead, the reduction in the number of LVM-decisions witnessed over recent
years is usually taken as an indication that substance abusers are being left to
their fate and are not receiving the care they have a right to.
If as a rule compulsory care in accordance with LVM fulfilled the
objectives described above, then the shift in legal praxis would of course
constitute a problem from the point of view both of care ideology and of the
safeguarding of individuals’ legal rights. However, there is no reliable
knowledge as to the treatment effects that are achieved with the help of LVM. No
effect studies that might provide information of this kind have been conducted
in this area. One obvious reason for this is that such studies would require
ethically indefensible experimental designs whereby comparable subjects were
randomised into either compulsory or voluntary treatment groups, or into a group
receiving no treatment at all. In the absence of research of this kind, the
question of the treatment effects of the compulsory treatment legislation must
be answered in a different way.
An examination of the smaller follow-up studies that have been
conducted shows that compulsory treatment at LVM institutions and voluntary
institutional care in general, often give rise to a similar improvement rate.
Irrespective of how treatment has been initiated, approximately one in ten
individuals remains free from drug abuse, and the condition of one in three has
improved in some way, after approximately one to two years.[50] Data of this kind cannot be
employed to draw conclusions as to possible treatment effects, however. Drug
users may be expected to pendulate between better and worse life conditions, and
may sometimes even desist from drug use even though they refuse to participate
in formally organised treatment.[51]
Furthermore, drug users in compulsory care are themselves doubtful as
to whether a stay of several months at an LVM institution has any useful effect
in terms of lasting rehabilitation.[52] As is the case with social
workers who have experience of LVM cases, the users themselves question whether
compulsion and potential violations of personal integrity can in any way
function as an introduction to effective treatment.[53] On the other hand, the majority
of both drug users and case-workers from the social services appear to have a
positive attitude towards the use of short term, compulsory detoxification. This
may help drug users to survive in really acute situations and may enable them,
in a sober/drug-free condition, to decide whether they wish to continue
receiving treatment on a voluntary basis.
It is not at all certain, however, that these scientific insights
will help to bring about any kind of revision or repeal of the legislation
forcing drug users into compulsory care. Firstly, Swedish society has a long
tradition of providing help even for those drug users who do not ask for
assistance from the authorities. It was decreed as early as in the Alcoholics
Act of 1913, that persons judged to lack the capacity to put their own lives in
order should be compelled to change by means of internment and compulsory work.
The paternalistic element in the welfare system is thus nothing new, but is
rather based on, and constitutes a development of, an idea that has been
practised for over ninety years. When Swedish authorities are faced with people
who are ruining their own or other people’s lives through drug abuse, the
country’s historical tradition means that the logical question is not simply
“Would you like some help?” but rather “Would you like some help, or are we
going to have to force it on you?”.
Secondly, the use of compulsory institutionalisation within the drug
treatment sector is based on a number of fundamental propositions that are taken
for granted and which in themselves constitute a justification for the LVM Act.
These include the conception that the problems experienced by society as a
result of drug use are substantial, that drugs and drug use are entirely
hazardous and pointless, that drug users are the victims of circumstances beyond
their own control and that treatment constitutes an adequate solution for the
problems experienced by different individuals.[54]
Additional propositions underlying the legislation are that drug use
is defined as a social and not a private problem and that people should not be
given the right to take their own lives by means of drug use. In addition there
is a strong conviction that the consumption of certain chemical substances (and
above all heroin) is highly addictive. This is regarded as having a debilitating
effect on the individual’s capacity to make rational choices.
Against the background of these fundamental ideas, it is entirely
consistent that public sector agencies be given the opportunity to temporarily
take into care those who are unable to cope with their lives in a socially
acceptable and constructive manner. Society may be said to be doing the “unfit
drug users” a service by preventing them from doing what they are assumed
actually not to want to do. This benevolent foundation underlying the
legislation is further reinforced by the fact that the LVM Act has a righteous
objective and that there exists a belief in society that the drug treatment
sector can contribute to the rehabilitation of drug users.
Irrespective of the results produced by treatment over the longer
term, the compulsory care sector can do no wrong; it is doomed to succeed, so to
speak. There are a number of factors that point to this. The first of these is
the fact that the goal of abstinence is achieved by definition through the
initial confinement of the drug user to a detoxification ward. The second is
that the goal of motivation is regarded as having been achieved once the drug
user agrees to being transferred to a more open form of treatment. According to
the legislation, this is something that should occur at the latest after three
months in an LVM institution, but it does not mean that the individual has
accepted voluntary treatment or that the possibility of returning him/her to
compulsory care has been eliminated. The third is that the legislation holds all
the trumps, since in purely human terms, it may seem better to do anything at
all rather than simply allowing drug users to take their lives in
peace.
In practice, compulsory treatment in accordance with the LVM Act has
three consequences that are of symbolic importance for the Swedish welfare
state: 1) it ensures that a substantial amount of resources are allotted to the
treatment of drug use, since LVM cannot be prioritised away even when available
budgets are tight; 2) it stands as a guarantee that society’s “unfortunates”
will be given assistance and will survive; and 3) it constitutes the basis of a
strong social services sector which has the opportunity to help even those
people who appear to lack the capacity to bring about changes on their
own.
If we look at these points from the opposite angle, however, we see
that being required to make savings will force local authorities to reserve
institutional care resources for LVM cases, instead of providing them to people
who are prepared voluntarily to seek the assistance of the treatment sector. It
might similarly be argued that LVM involves society’s “unfortunates” being
locked up and forced to accept treatment whose positive results are rather
dubious. In addition, a “strong social services sector” with the authority to
compel people into treatment may lead people to avoid turning to it for help out
of fear that they will be placed in care.
All in all, LVM’s time as a pilot project and “pioneering measure”[55] may now be seen as having come
to an end. The legislation has been in use for over twenty years and there is
still no evidence that compulsory treatment results in any kind of
rehabilitation over the long term for heavy drug users who lack the incentive to
change on their own. The reduction in the number of LVM decisions witnessed over
recent years has been viewed as indicating that local authorities make use of
the legislation primarily to save lives and to get people into detoxification.
Since both the preliminary work conducted in connection with the legislation and
the text of the legislation itself state that compulsory treatment is intended
also to lead to motivational work and long term rehabilitation, applying the law
in acute situations of this type is of course open to criticism. Looking to
expected treatment results, however, short term compulsory detoxification
appears to constitute the only form of LVM intervention that finds support in
the scientific literature and that appears rational from the point of view of
rehabilitation.
Sweden and
Holland – two drug policy models
It is a well known fact that since the 1960s,
Sweden and
Holland have
developed completely different types of drug policy. But there are a number of
misconceptions as to what the differences consist in and how they have arisen.
My contribution to this anthology involves elucidating these differences[56].
In the context of international discussions of drug policy, the
policies followed by
Sweden and
Holland are regarded as
being completely antithetical. Swedish policy is described as restrictive,
meaning that measures are directed at preventing the population coming into
contact with illegal narcotic substances. The basic assumption is that all
non-medical use of drugs constitutes abuse. The underlying motive is that this
is done for the people’s best and that it is the job of the state to shield the
population from danger. Dutch policy is described as liberal, i.e. the state
should not interfere in people’s private lives as long as this does not cause
injury to a third party. This also extends to behaviours regarded by the
majority as undesirable, e.g. illegal drug use. In the following, I will be
restricting myself to what I regard as the essential elements that distinguish
the two countries’ drug policies from one another.
Social problems
One way of studying the development of a certain drug policy is to
employ a social constructionist perspective. This term is used to indicate that
social problems such as drug use, for example, are constructed in a process in
which a large number of actors participate. One important aspect of this process
involves arriving at a definition of the problem that everyone is more or less
agreed upon. The causes of the problem, how it spreads, the measures suitable to
combat the problem, and who should assume responsibility for what, are all
factors that are determined by the way a problem is defined[57]. This process results in an
integrated strategy, a drugs policy. Against this backdrop, it is important to
see how this new social problem has been defined in the two countries. When drug
use among young people became the focus of an increasing amount of attention
during the 1960s, both countries appointed committees of experts, giving them
the task of charting the problem and proposing counter measures. As a point of
departure, the text now turns to a discussion of the composition of these
committees, which is important because it gives an indication of what
politicians perceived to be the nature of the problem. The committees’
conclusions to a large extent then laid the foundations for the way in which the
problem would be perceived, and set the course that the development of drug
policy has since followed.
Sweden
The Swedish Drug Treatment Committee (1965 - 1968) was dominated by
representatives of the medical disciplines, which may be understood as a result
of the fact that intravenous amphetamine abuse was regarded as constituting the
major drug problem in
Sweden. Since the Second World War,
amphetamines had been used pharmaceutically on a large scale and the medical
profession were experts in this area. The doctors’ influence, not only on the
committee, but also within the general debate, certainly contributed to the
establishment of one of the central points of departure for Swedish drug policy,
namely that the drug problem could be compared to an epidemic. Although the
committee made the point that the comparison only related to the extent of drug
use and not to the programme of countermeasures, the metaphor came to have a
major impact on the formulation of Swedish drug policy[58]. The strategy to combat
epidemics is described by Nils Bejerot [59] in the following
way:
1. The agent itself must as far as possible be eliminated (the drug)
2. Control must be exercised over the means of distributing the
hazardous agent (by blocking illegal
production, importation and sales)
3. There should be preventive measures focused on susceptible and at
risk, but as yet uninfected, groups among the population (the provision of instructions, information,
and the conduct of preventive activities)
4. Those already affected should be given
treatment
5. Those who are highly contagious should be isolated and given long
term care (compulsory treatment).
One requirement for the use of a control strategy of this kind is
that the epidemic be presented as constituting a threat for a large proportion
of (youths) or of the entire population. The threat should also be presented as
being so immediate that possible disadvantages become subordinate to the
expected advantages. A classic demagogic device was employed in order to win
support for the programme of measures. Asplin, for example, the Minister of
Health and Social Affairs, emphasised the importance of uniting all the forces
of good in the battle against drugs[60]. A distinction was thus made
between the forces of good and evil. The forces of good were comprised of all
those engaged in the battle against drugs. The forces of evil included
unprincipled pharmaceuticals producers and of course those who smuggled drugs
into
Sweden, the “drugs sharks”. Those
whose views deviated from the official definition of the problem were also
counted among the forces of evil, and a few years later, this group came to be
labelled “drug liberals”.
In 1978, the Swedish parliament stipulated that the goal was to be
the elimination of drugs (the “agent”) in
Sweden. These
were never to be allowed to become a part of Swedish culture[61]. With this, a new element was
introduced into the discussion surrounding drugs. Drug use was unSwedish. This
served to further strengthen a trend that had existed since the 1960s, namely
that drugs constituted an epidemic from abroad. The placing of the cause of the
drug problem outside
Sweden has been a distinctive
characteristic of Swedish drug policy. The conduct of the battle was not solely
the task of the authorities, but was also something for citizens in schools and
residential neighbourhoods. United, the Swedish people constituted the force of
good, battling against an evil coming in from abroad, and in 1984, Ingvar
Carlsson stated that the only acceptable goal was a drug free society[62].
A model was developed based on the simple idea that if there are no
drugs in society, then there can be no drug problem either. In order to arrive
at this situation, three principal lines of attack were required, which will be
recognised from the epidemiological model described above. Firstly, the supply
of the agent (drugs) to
Sweden was to be cut off, and the
customs service were to play a crucial role in this regard. Secondly, demand was
to be obstructed by preventing those who had not yet been affected from coming
into contact with drugs. This constitutes one of the central tasks of the police
patrols focused on street level drug dealing. Another preventive measure
consists in using informational and educational measures and influencing public
opinion in order to affect people’s attitudes and behaviour so that they have no
desire even to experiment with drugs. The mass media have a decisive role to
play here. Thirdly, a drug care sector is required to provide treatment for the
carriers of the disease (the drug users) pushing them towards a drug free life,
under compulsion if necessary (isolating the contagious).
Holland
The committee of experts established in
Holland (1966-1972)
comprised a broad group of lawyers, social scientists and medical professionals.
One of the direct reasons for the establishment of the committee was the harsh
criticism directed at the repressive approach to illegal drug use employed in
Holland during
the 1950s and until the latter part of the 1960s. By contrast with the situation
in
Sweden, cannabis was the focus of
attention in
Holland. This was a substance with no medical
connection and about which there was little or no detailed knowledge. It was
primarily regarded as a youth cultural phenomenon that could not be resolved by
means of criminal justice measures. Cannabis was one part of the powerful
cultural changes that were affecting the whole of society. The epidemic concept
was not used by the Dutch committee at all. Instead it referred to diffusion
theory, which has been used to explain the dissemination of innovations within a
population. The underlying assumption is that new phenomena begin by spreading
quickly, but that they then subside and settle at a lower saturation point.
There were differing views as to what constituted suitable measures,
but politicians gradually came to agree that Dutch drug policy would be based on
an assessment of the risks that the use of various psychoactive substances
involved both for the user him/herself and for society. In the context of this
risk assessment, cannabis involved fewer risks than LSD, amphetamines and
opiates, for example. Measures would be focused on those substances associated
with the greatest risks. One important point of departure was that not all drug
use was defined as abuse per se, but
rather that socially integrated drug use was both possible and did occur. Drug
policy measures were viewed as having the potential to exacerbate the problems,
and thereby also constituted a risk factor that was to be included in the
context of risk assessment. This led to strategies aimed at reducing the risks
associated with the use of cannabis that were distinct from those associated
with other substances[63].
The definition employed by the committee and its conceptualisation of
risk came to constitute the major elements in the drug policy adopted by the
Dutch parliament in 1976[64]. These factors had assumed a
special relevance in 1972, when heroin arrived and spread quickly, particularly
among marginalised youth groups. It is important to note that the causes of the
problem were sought in social conditions within Dutch society, and not outside
Holland. The
possibility of cutting off the supply of drugs was not discussed as a realistic
alternative. The openness of the Dutch economy and the country’s reliance on
transit trade with its enormous inflows and outflows of goods made this
impossible. The occurrence of drug use was viewed as a worrying development but
also as being part of a trend that could not be controlled by politics. Besides
the geographical and economic conditions, it would have demanded measures that
were irreconcilable with the country’s liberal tradition on the issue of the
relationship between state and citizens.
The assumption was made that drugs would constitute an (illegal) part
of the supply of other means of pleasure promotion for a considerable time to
come, and that they were something that society would be forced to live with. A
model was developed that would separate the market for cannabis from that of
other drugs associated with an unacceptable level of risk. As regards cannabis,
tolerating coffee shops was intended to keep this substance out of the criminal
sphere, whilst a more repressive strategy was developed in relation to other
substances (heroin, cocaine), with the police and customs being given a central
role. Preventive measures in the form of informational and educational
activities were focused primarily on establishing a dialogue between youths and
parents on how to behave in relation to drugs in general. To begin with, the
treatment of drug addicts had the goal of inducing complete abstinence from
drugs. When this turned out to be unrealistic, different goals were specified,
complete abstinence or controlled drug use, depending on the conditions present
in the case of a specific individual. Among the most important distinguishing
features of Dutch drug policy, then, are the way it differentiates between
substances and target groups, and the way measures are focused on the goal of
risk reduction.
Comparison
The fundamental points of departure for drug policy were formulated
during the first two decades of the modern drug problem. Later developments have
primarily served to cement these points of departure. What similarities and
differences can be identified then between the two
countries?
In
Sweden, the problem was defined as
constituting a major threat to the people, and in
Holland as part of a society undergoing a
process of change. In
Sweden, all non-medical drug use was
regarded as abuse, whilst socially integrated drug use was regarded as a
possibility in
Holland. In
Sweden, there is
a unified front against drugs, which would be irreconcilable with the Dutch
policy on differentiated measures based on risk assessment. In
Sweden, the forces of good and evil
were identified and distinguished from one another, in
Holland it was different
substances and ways of using them. By extension, the principal objective of
Swedish drug policy may be said to consist in shielding the population from
drugs. In
Holland, drug policy is focused on shielding
individuals and society against different types of risk that may arise as a
result of drug use.
One similarity between the two countries is that they both identify
three areas as central to drug policy: the control system, preventive efforts
and treatment. As has been described above, however, these areas have been
associated with very different goals and have been given a different content,
since the points of departure are completely different.
Finally, one may ask whether the drug situation in the two countries,
following slightly over thirty years of completely dissimilar forms of drug
policy, is also radically different? Shouldn’t the number of heavy drug addicts
be substantially higher in
Holland, as well as the proportion of the
population who have tried cannabis? Isn’t the number of drug related deaths much
lower in Sweden?
According to estimates published in the annual report of the European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in 2002, this is not the
case. The number of heavy drug addicts is approximately the same across the two
countries, and is in fact much higher in Sweden if the count is presented in
terms of the number per 1000 of population, 4.7 by comparison with 2.6[65]. In Holland, 19.1 per cent of
the population have used cannabis at some point, as compared with 13 per cent in
Sweden[66]. In relation to mortality rates,
too, Holland appears to have fewer cases of acute drug related deaths among drug
addicts than Sweden, despite having a larger number of opiate abusers[67].
Background
In Sweden, there is a widely held belief that we are a leading light
in the field of drug policy and treatment. The reality on the street is very
different. And for myself as a researcher, physician and human being, it is
completely unbearable. This is clearest in relation to patients with heroin
dependency, for whom there is a treatment which international and Swedish
meta-analyses agree improves the situation of patients, reducing levels of problematic drug use, improving social
functionality – including the reduction of criminality – and perhaps most
importantly, reducing mortality. Psychologically based treatment methods have no
such effect, unless they are provided in addition to an effective
pharmacological treatment; and even as part of a combination of this kind, the
treatment method most commonly offered in Sweden, i.e. non-specific support,
shows no effect.[68] In spite of the clarity of these
data, which in some cases have been available for approximately twenty years,
the “Swedish model” continues to withhold effective treatment from the majority,
i.e. approximately 90 per cent, of patients with heroin dependency, for
ideological reasons. Even among the minority of patients who are granted access
to treatment, this occurs in a spirit of policing rather than one of medical
provision. As a result, drug related mortality in Sweden has now been increasing
steeply for almost a decade, whilst other countries – such as France and Norway,
for example – have been able to break corresponding trends. A large part of this
mortality in Sweden occurs in direct association with patients being
compulsorily discharged from methadone treatment (MMT) as a result of sometimes
quite trivial infractions, and sometimes having undergone several years of
successful treatment.
Even if methadone and similar pharmaceuticals are effective for those
who have already developed heroin dependency, this effectiveness must be weighed
against the risk of leakage, and of new recruitment into problematic drug use.
Concerns over developments of this kind are at best based on ignorance, however.
Primary methadone dependency is a rarity even in countries where access to
methadone is largely unrestricted – methadone abuse does of course occur, but
only among persons who already have a well-developed drug dependency, namely on
heroin. What is more important is to realise that every active drug addict
constitutes a source for the dissemination of drugs, since dealing constitutes
part of the syndrome. Every addict that can be removed from the street by means
effective treatment contributes to a reduction in the accessibility of drugs.
There are no medical, general preventive or economic arguments that serve to
support the line adopted in Sweden. The position taken on this issue is the
result of the political needs of the actors involved, and not of the medical
needs of the patients.
A conceptual framework for the treatment of heroin
dependency
People do not take drugs because they want to die from AIDS or an
overdose. Addicts want to achieve the same positive goals in life as everybody
else. The difference is that the patients fail in this time and time again.
Relapses intervene and disrupt their lives, so that they constantly find
themselves back at square one. This constitutes a failure of “self-efficacy”,
i.e. the capacity to “self-regulate” behaviour in order to achieve one’s goals.
Today our knowledge of the processes within the central nervous system that lie
behind this phenomenon is relatively good.[69] Behavioural choices are normally
made through the continuous weighing of contradictory factors against one
another. Shall I go over to the computer and finish this article, or stay
sitting on the sofa? Shall I have children, wonderful creatures, but such hard
work too? The everyday requirements of self-regulation are difficult enough. In
a patient with drug dependency, the available choices are more restricted, and
are determined by the balance between normal motivational forces and factors
associated with the dependency. Among these latter factors, heroin euphoria is
important to begin with, but over time the focus shifts to holding one’s own
against a painful craving, and overcoming bad habits. Relapse occurs when the
individual is unable to get this balance to weigh in favour of the behaviours
that lead to the goals he or she is seeking to achieve: keeping a job, a partner
or maybe a place to live.[70]
Failure leads to a process of negative learning, which lowers the
patients’ expectations of their ability to cope when they are faced with choices
in the future. These expectations are integrated into thought patterns which in
time become automatic. There is a myth that drug users have to have “had enough
of drugs” before they can open up to the effects of treatment, but the only
thing an addict learns from failure is – how to fail. The most important task of
treatment is to help the patient break this cycle, and to help him experience
being successful. In the context of this work any method that shifts the
motivational balance in favour of “healthy” behavioural choices is of use. Such
interventions can be accomplished with both pharmacological and psychological
tools.[71]
The role of the pharmaceuticals - methadone and
buprenorfin
For over 30 years, ideologically motivated social commentators have
repeated the same misapprehensions: treatments employing methadone and other
similar substances amount to “legal narcotics”, which at best serve to keep the
patient off the street. In actual fact, the substances at issue have been
produced in such a way as to minimise the extent to which they provide the
feelings of euphoria produced by the illicit drugs for which they serve as
substitutes. Even if this has not been completely successful, the potential for
dependency is much lower by comparison with the drugs available on the street,
in line with our knowledge of the fundamental pharmacological properties of
these substances.[72] The mechanisms by means of which
these pharmaceuticals may shift the motivational balance in the right direction
are also well known (Table 1).
Table 1. The clinical effect profile of pharmaceuticals that may be
relevant for the pharmacological treatment of heroin dependency.
|
Type of pharmaceutical |
Inhibition of craving for drug |
Inhibition of heroin-euphoria |
|
Full opiat receptor agonist
(e.g. methadone) |
Yes |
Incomplete |
|
Partial agonist
(e.g. buprenorfin) |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Pure antagonist
(e.g. naltrexon) |
No |
Yes |
“Agonist” is the pharmacological term given to a substance that binds
a receptor and activates it. An “antagonist” on the other hand binds the
receptor with no accompanying activation taking place, whereby the effect of
other activating substances – such as the heroin – is smothered and fails to
materialise. “Partial agonists” fall between these two - binding is followed by
a certain, but limited receptor activation. If there are no other receptor
activating substances in the system, then there will be a certain level of
opiate-like clinical effect. In the presence of other, more potent opiates, this
effect is instead transformed into antagonism.
Among the suitable pharmaceuticals, methadone is the one with far and
away the best evidentiary support. Methadone reduces levels of mortality and
morbidity, and improves social functioning. From a medical perspective, the only
reasonable conclusion is that patients who are not helped by other means must be
afforded the right to be given this form of treatment. This is exactly what was
established by the federal guidelines laid down in 1998 by the American National
Institutes of Health.[73] There are however disadvantages
associated with Methadone that limit its usefulness; above all a certain
potential for overdoses and leakage into street level drug use. In the majority
of cases the treatment must continue for several years. Strategies are also
needed, therefore, that would constitute a “first line of defence” before the
step is taken to methadone treatment. This need is particularly great in
relation to young patients, and patients at an early stage in the development of
a dependency. In this regard the partial
opiate receptor agonist buprenorfin (Subutex) has an interesting
pharma-cological profile, indicating a
lower dependency potential and lower toxicity. The use of buprenorfin therefore
suggests itself as an attractive option for creating the conditions for modern
psychological treatment.
The development of the Maria model
In 1999, at the Maria Clinic in
Stockholm, we organised a project to develop
integrated, Subutex-assisted treatment. Daily medication with Subutex was
combined with group treatment employing cognitive behavioural therapy. This
therapy focused on preventing relapse in accordance with a manual-based
methodology for which there was good empirical support.[74] Other components included
individual conversational support, and strict controls that the patient is not
taking drugs. Based on a small series of successful pilot patients, we began a
controlled study of the model in the spring of 2000. All were given the
intensive psychosocial treatment package; half were in addition randomised to
receive buprenorfin treatment and half to a placebo group. It is important to
point out that these patients, as is the case with approximately 90 per cent of
Swedish heroin users, would otherwise not have had access to either methadone or
buprenorfin nor to qualified psychosocial treatment.
One of the challenges facing treatments of this type is that of on
the one hand maintaining the ambition of complete abstinence from drugs, and a
structure that promotes this goal, but without the treatment being transformed
into a means of oppression, with the coveted and quite literally vital
pharmaceutical being used as an instrument of domination. The goal, or course,
is that with time, the patient will assume responsibility for the treatment. We
employed treatment plans that were careful to make it clear that problems during
treatment would in the first instance lead to supportive measures – more
frequent individual discussions, or, in extreme cases, a short period of
hospitalisation. It was important to convey the point that by contrast with the
methadone treatment model that had become established in
Stockholm, our goal was to
do everything to keep the patients in treatment. At the same time, there were
explicit rules stating that missed appointments or urine tests that were
positive for drugs would lead to patients being discharged if they did not
participate in support measures and gradually become stabilised. This
combination created a situation of mutual trust and a feeling of being respected
among the patients, in a way that is crucial if any form of treatment is to be
successful. The results were striking, and at time of writing are about to be
published in one of the world’s most prestigious medical journals, The Lancet.[75] Given the requirement of
complete abstinence, none of the patients in the control group were able to cope
for longer than approximately two months, despite a considerably more intensive
programme of psychosocial treatment than is normally available for this group of
patients. In the active group, on the other hand, fifteen of twenty patients
were still in treatment after a year. On average their urine tests were clean
75% of the time, and their level of accumulated problems had been dramatically
reduced, as witnessed by a stable housing situation, substantially lower levels
of involvement in crime and a significantly improved employment situation. And
we know from Gunne and Grönbladh’s methadone studies that improvements of this
kind do not reach a peak until approximately four years after treatment.
The myths
“The French Catastrophe”. Subutex was registered in
France over six years ago. The
situation in
France was distinctive, with heavy
restrictions on methadone, and with the majority of patients not receiving
treatment. The result was a high and rising level of mortality. When Subutex was
registered it was made available without restriction and with no resources being
made available for additional components of treatment. General practitioners
began issuing a quite phenomenal number of prescriptions. Even given the low
level of qualitative treatment involved, there are now approximately 1/5 as many
deaths as there were six years ago.[76] Highly qualitative treatment is
clearly preferable to a less qualitative alternative. But if the choice is
between less qualitative treatment and no treatment at all, it is difficult to
see the logic or the morality in opting for the latter. It is in fact
Sweden that is witnessing the
catastrophe, not
France.
“The uncontrolled prescription of Subutex”. A close collaboration between interested treatment workers across
Sweden made it possible to count the
number of patients receiving structured treatment in accordance with the Maria
model, and to make comparisons with the number of patients being prescribed
Subutex. For a long time, the difference was negligible. On the other hand,
Subutex was available for purchase on the street, for the most part having been
smuggled in from
Finland. This is unfortunate, but the
medical risks involved are limited. The drug-induced euphoria associated with
Subutex is limited, and the drug’s pharmacological properties make the risk of
overdose extremely remote. In France, in the few cases of deaths where the
patient was found to have buprenorfin in the bloodstream, there was also a
combination of other substances present, which meant the death could not be tied
to Subutex. Irrespective of this, it is not clear that restricting the use of
Subutex among conscientious Swedish doctors is the most logical way of resolving
the problems associated with the smuggling of this substance from abroad.
“But we don’t want a liberal drug policy”. Presenting oneself or one’s party as the strongest denouncer of
drugs has become a competitive and important political sport. It is difficult to see, however, how drug
policy would be made more “liberal”, i.e. more permissive of problematic drug
use, by offering effective treatment, in strictly controlled forms, thereby
helping the patients to stop taking drugs, to desist from crime and to improve
their social situation. I am personally in favour of drug policy being made as
stringent as possible. Those who sell drugs should be taken off the streets, and
those who deal in drugs without themselves having a dependency should in my
opinion be sent to prison – for a long time. But those who are dependent on
drugs are not helped by policing measures, and effective treatment constitutes
the best way of reducing both the demand and supply of drugs. And this it worth
repeating: Effective treatment constitutes one of the cornerstones of a
restrictive drug policy. Or it should.
Comprehensive strategy
New forms of treatment may be regarded by their pioneers with an
enthusiasm that is every bit as naïve as the opposition. I feel a heavy
responsibility to avoid falling into this trap. It is unlikely that Subutex
constitutes a treatment that will suddenly prove to be the salvation for all
heroin addicts. On the other hand, the treatment does widen the range on offer
and helps us together with the patient to choose the method that is best suited
to each individual case. It is easy to see the opportunity for a rational,
well-balanced strategy that would make treatment available to those patients who
need it, whilst at the same time avoiding inferior alternatives. A strategy of
this kind was proposed in 2002 by an expert group working on the commission of
the National Board of Health and Welfare. Even before this document was made
public, a 28 page letter of protest had arrived, comprising a comprehensive
sample of all the uninformed reflex reactions that are expressed in the debate
in this area. The question is whether we have what it takes for re-orientation.
We face a choice between cherished dogmas and the lives of
patients.
Over the past ten to twenty years, the prison population has expanded
in virtually all western countries. Drug policy constitutes an important part of
the explanation. There is a close correlation between drug policy and the
expansion of the prison system. The battle to combat drugs has filled the
prisons with drug addicts. This constitutes the single most important reason for
the large increase in the prison population in the
USA. Drug users
sentenced for drug related petty offences comprise the vast majority of prison
inmates in the
United
States. During the 1990s, the number of prison
inmates rose by eight per cent per annum, and by the end of the decade, two
million Americans sat in the countries’ prisons on any given day. In
Europe, too, the numbers of both inmates in general and
imprisoned drug addicts are on the increase. There is still a long way to go
before we reach the American levels, and in addition it is difficult to know how
many of the prison inmates are drug addicts as a result of shifting routines and
definitions. One estimation, however, places the number of drug users passing
through the prison systems of EU countries at between 180,000 and 600,000 per
year. And the trend is towards further increases.[77]
In terms of the social resources they have at their disposal, the
drug users among prison inmates constitute a particularly weak group. This
weakness is marked not only in relation to the population as a whole, but even
by comparison with other inmates. Among those in prison, drug users are more
often homeless, more often suffer from financial problems and are more likely to
receive no prison visits. Available studies of living conditions among the
general population of drug addicts present a picture of a group with a wretched
economy, difficulties finding housing, who are in poor condition both physically
and psychologically and who lack social contacts with others. Not all are
sentenced to prison, however. Are there differences between those addicts who
are repeatedly sent to prison and those who find themselves only rarely or never
being dealt with by the prison service? Above all, do they constitute a more
marginalised group? No surveys have been conducted in
Sweden, which
makes it difficult to answer this question. Studies from other countries show
that police and the courts prioritise poor addicts and immigrants in particular.
Once again, the
USA provides a very illustrative
example. African-American men comprise six per cent of the country’s population
and seven per cent of the population of drug users. At the same time
African-American men comprise 35 per cent of those arrested for drug offences,
and fully 75 per cent of those sentenced to prison for offences of this kind.[78]
Over the last few years, there has been considerable discussion of
the over-population of the Swedish prison system. Everything points to an
expansion of the prison system, with new prisons being built to provide room for
an expanded number of inmates. The alternative would have been
decriminalisations or an increased use of alternatives to a prison term such as
contractual treatment programmes. Over the next four years, however, there are
plans to provide 1500 new prison and remand places. A large proportion of these
will probably be filled by drug addicts. In the year 2000, 3,900 individuals, or
43 per cent of those admitted to prison, were heavy drug users.[79]
From this viewpoint, Swedish drug policy is not unique, but rather
constitutes part of an international trend. The relevant decisions have
nonetheless been taken at the national level. The changes in the Swedish prison
population are a consequence of political decisions taken in the Swedish
Parliament and of the choice of priorities made by civil servants within the
police and prosecution services.
These developments started a little over 30 years ago, when the penal
tariff associated with drug offences was increased sharply. Over the following
decades, the amount of prison time awarded in connection with drug offences
doubled, from 7,000 months per year (during the period 1973 to 1975) to 14,000
months per year (during the period 1990 to 1993). The legislation was tightened
successively, with a prison term being included in the sanctioning scale for the
mere consumption of drugs in 1993. From this point on, the 1990s saw the police
prioritise measures focused on the consumption of drugs, directed at the drug
user on the street. This has led to a substantial increase in the number of
people convicted of drug offences; between 1993 and 1998 this number increased
by over 40 per cent. In 1996, just over half of those convicted exclusively of
drug offences were sentenced to prison. The remainder were given other sanctions
such as contractual treatment, probation or day-fines. There is a strong
correlation between prison sentences for drug offences and drug use at the level
of the individual. Nine of ten of the drug addicts admitted to prison have
already served a prison term for drug offences relatively recently (during the
last five years). As a consequence, the proportion of drug addicts among the
prison population has increased over this same period. According to official
statistics, a little under half of those admitted to prison over the last three
years have been drug users. The increase in the proportion of drug users has
been particularly marked among those admitted for a short stay in prison (at
most two months); here the proportion of drug users has almost trebled during
the 1990s.[80]
Thus if crime policy remains unchanged, a growing proportion of
society’s resources will be devoted to locking up drug addicts. Does this seem
reasonable? This question is not primarily of an ideological nature. As in any
other area of policy, drug policy must be evaluated with respect to its effects.
This presentation will focus on some of the concrete effects of drug policy for
those serving custodial sentences within the Swedish prison system. The issue of
interest is the effect on the individual drug user and the central question is
that of the way in which the individual’s chances of desisting from drug use are
affected during the time spent in prison.
This requires that we first provide an answer to the question of
which effects are relevant. What is required for drug addicts admitted to prison
to take the step to a life without criminality and drugs? When these questions
are put to the drug users themselves, there are primarily two important factors:
the one is an improved social situation, the other motivation on the part of the
individual him or herself. If people have not themselves decided to stop using
drugs, or to change their lives, the most important condition necessary for
effecting change is absent. There is also agreement as to the important role
played by the individual’s social situation in relation to the question of
continued drug use or desistence. Work, education, housing, keeping drug free
company, and participation in leisure activities are crucial to desisting from
drug use and remaining free from drugs.[81]
Given this, the question to be examined can be specified more
precisely. What effects does current Swedish prison care have on 1) the inmates’
social situation, and 2) their motivation to stop using drugs? To begin with, a
custodial sentence in itself has a negative effect on both motivation and the
individual’s social situation. Active
efforts are therefore required to counteract these negative effects. This
insight has also won ground in the legislation in this area. According to the
Act on Correctional Treatment in Institutions, the prison authority is charged
with counteracting the injury caused by the stay in custody itself. In addition,
the inmate’s adjustment to society is to be facilitated. That is to say, at the
same time as the state sentences an individual to prison, within the framework
of this sanction, those receiving such sentences are to be given a real
opportunity to desist from both criminality and drug use.[82]
The social situation. There are no statistics relating to the type of resources made
available to drug addicts in prison, nor are there accounts of the forms of
assistance that have actually been utilised by inmates in order to improve their
social situation. On the other hand, there is comprehensive documentation
relating to the existence of this need. There are several studies, for example,
showing that prison inmates have significantly poorer resources across the areas
of education, finances, health and social relations than the remainder of the
population.[83]
The need is thus quite substantial. What do we know about the
capacity to meet this need? There are one or two interview surveys of inmates
which focus on the forms of assistance provided by the prison service. According
to these surveys, a small proportion of inmates report that they have been given
forms of assistance relevant to changing their social situation, whilst the
majority feel that they have not been given access to help of this kind. Across
many different areas, only a minority report that they have received assistance.
In a study conducted by the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention, 95
randomly sampled inmates were interviewed about their situation during the month
prior to their release from prison. Of these, 19 per cent reported that they
received help with housing, 29 per cent help with employment, 15 per cent help
with their financial situation and 17 per cent reported having received help to
maintain their network of social contacts. In my own questionnaire survey of 166
drug addicts in prison, a little over ten per cent reported that they were
receiving relevant help at the time, with a further fifteen per cent reporting
they would be given the opportunity to receive relevant assistance towards the
end of their time in prison. Sixty per cent answered that they received no help
at all or almost none. This indicates the existence of major deficiencies in the
prison service’s capacity to respond to the documented social needs of inmates –
either on its own or in collaboration with other agencies. According to the
report of the Drugs Inquiry, the trend is on the decline.[84]
Motivation. As is the case with Swedish drug policy in general, the care
provided to inmates by the prison service is today based on the assumption that
motivation and coercion complement one another. The more difficult it becomes to
use drugs, the more people will want to stop doing so. The expanded use of
compulsory measures is not regarded as antagonistic towards the reinforcement of
motivation, but rather the one is viewed as a prerequisite for the other.[85] But there is reason to
question this assumption, which ignores both the harmful effects of compulsion
and the influence of the social situation. In an immediate sense, repeated
compulsory measures have a destructive effect. This is true across the range of coercive measures – from
individual urine tests and body searches to custodial sentences as such.
Further, the assumption that the use of compulsion serves a complementary
function involves an underestimation of the significance of the social situation
for individual motivation. A drug user who is able to see a practicable route to a decent job,
a place to live and a functional social network following release from prison
will in general be more motivated to stop using drugs than one who does not see
such a future, and who is instead confronted by the police, unemployment and
further stays in prison. It is important to understand why people continue to
use drugs. Having followed the life of the drug user at close hand over a period
of several years, Bengt Svensson stated that it involves “wretchedness,
treachery, a lack of solidarity, illness, suffering and death, but it also
includes other elements – sociability, eventfulness, short-term perspectives, an
attitude of it-always-works-out-in-the-end, a feeling of competence, occupation
in the form of criminal earning patterns, and the artificial pleasures produced
by drugs. This can be contrasted with
what normal life often has to offer them by way of alternative – loneliness,
unemployment, poverty, idleness, a sense of being superfluous.”[86]
The motivation to stop using drugs waxes and wanes in the context of
a social situation. But in the prison service of today, it is treated as
something isolated. Inmates are motivated to stop using drugs by means of
special courses aimed at affecting their ways of thinking, their attitudes and
their self-image. The objective of these courses is to provide the mental tools
needed to cope with life without drugs and criminality, irrespective of an
individual’s social situation. But willpower and an improved self-image are
resources that are often broken down by setbacks following release. Cognitive
programmes may be sufficient to help some, but are unlikely to be enough for the
large majority.[87]
Drug users comprise a continuously increasing proportion of the
growing prison population. Given the high costs – in both economic and human
terms – this course of action ought to be motivated by good arguments. It lies
in everyone’s interests at least to ask about its effects, since this
constitutes the only means of judging whether or not the project has been a
success. The conclusion drawn from the analysis presented here is that the
prison service of today appears to be poorly equipped to take care of the group
of individuals in question. There are insufficient resources to improve the
inmates’ social situation, which also has a negative effect on their motivation
to stop using drugs. Given these circumstances, sentencing even more people with
drug problems to prison would appear to be highly
irrational.
Leif Lenke and Börje Olsson
Background and objectives
Ever since drug use was exposed to the glare of publicity and defined
as a social problem during the 1960s, the greatly heightened mortality rates
associated with problematic drug use have constituted one of the main reasons
that this issue has continually been awarded a prominent place in both the
political arena and the wider social debate. The mystery and drama that have
always been associated with drugs have further increased levels of interest,
whilst this, in combination with the fact that, in spite of everything, drug use
remains an activity of which the majority have no knowledge, has allowed the
myths surrounding this phenomenon to flourish. In relative terms, the numbers of
drug related deaths are small. At a rough estimate, the number of alcohol
related deaths, for example, is approximately 20 to 30 times as high as the
number of deaths associated with drug use, without receiving anything like the
same amount media attention.
Statistics on drug related mortality have been presented in
systematic form since 1956. In part this information has been used as an
indicator of the extent of drug use and of trends over time, but it has also
served as a source of information on the dangers posed by the various substances
and on the hazardous living conditions in which drug users live their
lives.
Drug related mortality does not constitute a single uniform concept,
but rather includes a variety of different causes of death. Often it is the
immediate deaths, such as are caused as a direct consequence of the consumption
of narcotic substances, that are emphasised. The most common of these comprises
heroin overdoses. There are other causes of drug related deaths, however, such
as infections that have arisen in association with injections (including
HIV/AIDS), accidents that take place whilst under the influence of drugs or acts
of violence taking place between drug users. In addition, the statistics usually
differentiate between immediate causes of death and causes that have contributed
indirectly to the death. Thus when statistics on drug related mortality are
employed for various purposes there is plenty of room for confusion and
misunderstanding. For the moment, Swedish authorities and organisations present
at least three different statistical series relating to this type of mortality.
The pictures of the extent of drug use and of trends over time differ somewhat
between these statistical series, and it is clear that the series chosen for
presentation and reference in a certain context may depend on the objectives of
those presenting the data.
The aim of this article is twofold. The first intention is to clarify
the differences between the different types of statistics presented in this
area. This will involve amongst other things attempting to describe what the
different statistical series show. This is particularly important where
comparisons are made with drug related mortality in other countries. The second
intention involves an attempt to analyse and understand why these statistics
have become the focus of a “political” conflict.
The statistics
National statistics relating to the number of drug related deaths
have been published in
Sweden for many years. The two oldest
series are those presented annually in the publication “Drogutvecklingen i
Sverige” (Drug Trends in
Sweden) produced by the Swedish
Council for Information on Alcohol and other Drugs. These two series are based
on
Sweden’s official cause of death
statistics. The first goes back to 1956 and includes deaths where drug addiction
(classified in accordance with the ICD classification system)[88] was included as the underlying
cause of death. According to WHO (the World Health Organization) the term
underlying cause of death relates to “the disease or injury that initiated the
train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident
or violence, which produced the fatal injury.”[89] This means that in principal these
statistics reflect deaths – for the most part relating to overdoses – that are
immediately associated with the consumption of drugs.
Table 1. Drug related mortality in Sweden.
|
Year |
SCB 1[90] |
SCB 2[91] |
FHI[92] |
|
1970 |
10 |
29 |
|
|
1971 |
5 |
44 |
|
|
1972 |
3 |
43 |
|
|
1973 |
1 |
34 |
|
|
1974 |
3 |
23 |
|
|
1975 |
5 |
31 |
|
|
1976 |
5 |
39 |
|
|
1977 |
7 |
43 |
|
|
1978 |
14 |
72 |
|
|
1979 |
25 |
79 |
|
|
1980 |
16 |
74 |
|
|
1981 |
16 |
85 |
|
|
1982 |
26 |
104 |
|
|
1983 |
16 |
103 |
|
|
1984 |
20 |
140 |
|
|
1985 |
21 |
150 |
|
|
1986 |
13 |
138 |
|
|
1987 |
71 |
141 |
|
|
1988 |
56 |
125 |
|
|
1989 |
57 |
113 |
|
|
1990 |
64 |
143 |
64 |
|
1991 |
62 |
147 |
62 |
|
1992 |
67 |
176 |
67 |
|
1993 |
82 |
181 |
82 |
|
1994 |
85 |
204 |
85 |
|
1995 |
71 |
194 |
71 |
|
1996 |
124 |
251 |
124 |
|
1997 |
73 |
265 |
99 |
|
1998 |
65 |
263 |
81 |
|
1999 |
64 |
280 |
99 |
|
2000 |
100 |
353 |
104 |
The statistical series are based on two principles. Those labelled
SCB 1 and FHI relate to the “underlying” cause of death. In practice, these
series show those cases where death has occurred as a direct consequence of drug
use. In this instance, the most common form of such deaths relate to so-called
“overdoses” as a result of intravenous heroin use. The series SCB 2 also
includes cases were the drug has worked as a so-called “contributory” cause of
death. In principle, this latter series describes mortality within the group of
drug users at large, i.e. it includes deaths that were not directly related to
an overdose.
Diagram 1. Drug related deaths in
Sweden
1969-2000.
Diagram 2. Drug related deaths in
Sweden
1969-2000. Presented by age.
As can be seen from Diagram 1, the number of drug related deaths has
increased dramatically, particularly during the 1990s and in the category where
drug use is also included as a contributory cause of death. When the number of
deaths is broken down by age, there appears to have been a similarly sharp
increase across more or less all age groups (Diagram 2). This means that the
increase cannot be explained by reference to an aging cohort of drug
users.
Whilst the statistics relating to drug related deaths are subject to
a number of problems (including changes to diagnosis codes, changes in the
frequency of autopsies etc.), the general picture they provide of the trend over
the last 20 years is nonetheless quite unequivocal. The number of drug related
deaths (underlying and contributory) is today considerably higher than it has
ever been before. In addition, the rate of increase appears to have become
steeper over recent years. It is naturally quite correct to demand that the
problems associated with these statistics be investigated and that work be
conducted to improve them, but this must not be allowed to serve as an excuse
for not analysing what implications the increase that can already be observed
ought to have for drug policy.
A problem?
To what extent then has particular attention been focused on this
problem in the context of the drugs debate? A number of experts have drawn
attention to it, amongst others the public health physician and now director
general of the National Institute of Public Health, Gunnar Ågren, who put it in
the following way in an interview with the tabloid newspaper Expressen
(98-11-19):
Mortality among heroin addicts is twice as high in
Stockholm as in other
European cities. The only treatment method that is reasonably effective,
methadone, is held in check by Swedish drug policy.
This is not so self-evident to everyone, however. The website of the
Norwegian association the League against Intoxicants[93], for example, includes an article
entitled “Överdosfrågan, en hälsofråga?” (The overdose issue, a question of
health?). This article argues against
focusing on the problem of drug related deaths. It states
that:
270 individuals died of an overdose last year (in
Norway). This is
serious. But the discussion of the measures that should be taken has to be seen
against the background of an international debate on legalisation, in which the
overdose problem constitutes a cut-off point.
How should this be understood? To begin with, 270 deaths is indeed a very high number. The number
produced headlines in the international press. Few countries show levels of drug
related mortality relative to population size that are as high as those of
Norway.
But what are we to understand by the use of the phrase “the
discussion of these deaths has to be seen against the background of an
international debate on legalisation”? Well, according to the organisation
itself, which advocates a policy of “zero-tolerance”[94]like its brother organisations in
Sweden – the National Association for a Drug-free Society (RNS), Hassela, and
the National Swedish Parents Anti-Narcotics Association (FMN) – focusing on the
high mortality among Norwegian drug users is well-suited to the purposes of the
so-called “harm reduction” movement.[95] This movement advocates a view
that drug policy must focus on reducing the harms associated with drug use, even
if this drug use continues. This movement has also – according to the FMR –
“often been seen as constituting a spearhead within the legalisation movement.”
Thus focusing on drug related deaths serves to assist the legalisation movement.
In the text, this is expressed in terms stating that since many in Norway have
agreed to a 10 point programme intended to reduce levels of mortality among drug
users,
this shows that the arguments of the legalisation movement have had a
major impact.… Whereas analyses show that the proposals will at best have only a
marginal effect in preventing overdoses, but will produce crime policy signals
that may leave us with a great many more overdose cases to deal
with.
Here we have the European drug policy debate in a nutshell. To the
extent that you prioritise attempts to reduce the harms caused by drug use, you
are helping the “legalisation movement” by “sending the wrong signals”. One of
the characteristics of this debate is that those on the “zero-tolerance” side
feel that there are no dilemmas in drug policy. They were against the use of
methadone programmes because these were viewed as sending out the “wrong
signals”. They are against needle exchange programmes for the same reasons, in
spite of the fact that such programmes have been recommended by WHO[96] etc.
The parallels with the alcohol rationing
system.
What we are looking at is a classic example of antagonism between
absolutist and reformist political theory and practice. The “absolutists” oppose
reform because reforms tend to reduce the incitement and the will to achieve the
ultimate goal. The same was true of the absolutist temperance movement’s
opposition to the system of alcohol rationing. Few today are aware of the fact
that the temperance movement was in fact the most outspoken opponent of alcohol
rationing and took up the cudgels to abolish this rationing system. (They did so
in collaboration with the, often conservative, alcohol liberals). Svante
Nycander has illustrated this process very clearly in the book “Svenskarna och
spriten”. [97]
Given our knowledge of the dramatic increase in levels of various
problems that took place following the abolition of alcohol rationing – in the
form of substantial increases in mortality, crime and other social problems –
one might ask how this could have happened.[98] It is perhaps not so surprising,
however, that those who tend to cover this area – i.e. the temperance movement –
have no desire to air this question.
The answer lies nonetheless in the ideology of the temperance
movement itself. The Swedish temperance movement – as is the case with the
corresponding movements in
Finland,
Norway,
Iceland and
North America – are/were based on moral foundations, often
with a Free Church connection. Here becoming intoxicated is viewed as immoral
because one is then unable to take full responsibility for one’s actions. This
leads to the conclusion that an “alcohol-free society” is the only correct line.
In today’s terminology, Ivan Bratt – the man who created the alcohol rationing
system – was a representative of the “harm reduction” school in the area of
alcohol policy. His proposal and his policy led the temperance movement to lose
the referendum on a total prohibition of alcohol in 1922. He was never forgiven
for this. His policy meant that the state “legalised” alcohol. Bratt sent out
the “wrong signals”.
Against this, Bratt argued that the harms associated with alcohol –
in all their forms – during the period of alcohol rationing remained at a very
low and stable level for several decades, and that a total prohibition could not
have been upheld. Mortality rates among alcohol abusers at the time were no
higher than among the normal population etc.
This didn’t suit the temperance movement. Its focus lay not on harm
and mortality, but instead was more or less exclusively directed at the fact
that the number of teetotallers
declined during the period of rationing. As did the number of organised
teetotallers.
The abolition of alcohol rationing led to a dramatic deterioration in
the level of alcohol related harm. It was a success in only one, and that a
rather problematical, regard. This related to the fact that the number of
persons applying to join the temperance movement underwent a substantial
increase. It is difficult to disregard the fact that this increase was a
function of the way that alcohol was once again being experienced as – and had
once again become – a serious social problem.
On the continent – as in
Denmark – the temperance movement
chose a different path. These movements were not built on moral, absolutist
foundations, but were rather based on a public health perspective. The situation
was adjudged such that liquor was
deemed to constitute the principal problem and the duty on liquor was therefore increased very
substantially. Alcohol consumption fell, and with it levels of alcohol related
harm.
The parallels with the drug policy of today are clear. On the
continent, this “reformist policy” was regarded as successful, so successful
even that in many areas temperance movements ceased to exist altogether. Against
this background, today’s drug policies are focused on those drugs that are
regarded as constituting the greatest danger.
The “absolutist” temperance movements recovered, however, and
continued to promote a policy whereby less potent forms of alcohol were regarded
as constituting a “stepping stone” to “heavier” forms of alcohol consumption.
During the period of alcohol rationing, it was permitted to purchase liquor, but
strong beer was completely prohibited according to the doctrine of the
temperance movement. In
Iceland, this went so far that as
late as in 1989 it was possible to purchase liquor (e.g. “Black Death”) in
restaurants, but not strong beer[99]. The policy was discontinued, but
these drinking practices had by then served to put
Iceland in first
place among the Nordic countries in terms of problematic drinking
habits.
Relevance for the Swedish drug debate.
What then is the relevance of the above discussion for the Swedish
drug policy debate? The answer is that in
Sweden, this
debate is still conducted in line with a doctrine similar to that on which the
temperance movement was based. With one or two exceptions, the “new temperance
movements” that have emerged in the drug policy arena, are founded on the
so-called “zero tolerance” principle. These actors oppose all measures that may
be regarded as sending out the “wrong signals”. Such measures have included
amongst other things both the methadone programme and needle exchanges. In
addition, the policy initiatives associated with such actors also assign a
central role to the police, not only in relation to trafficking and smuggling
etc., but also in relation to the control of users’ consumption of drugs. The express goal
of the police, who also work in accordance with the zero tolerance principle, is
that “It’s going to be tough to be a drug abuser”.[100]
Here the rhetoric still looks the same. It took its most recent
expression in an article in the national broadsheet Svenska Dagbladet
(2002-06-23). There a representative of the Hassela Nordic Network (itself a
ZTO), MaLou Lindholm wrote that
Sweden is in the process of
developing a new form of problematic drug use, namely of the methadone-like
substance Subutex. According to Lindholm, this substance had “created 50
thousand drug abusers in
France” and was now in the process of
being introduced here.
At the same time, no mention at all was made of the fact that the use
of Subutex is in fact a treatment method that over recent years has contributed
to a reduction of nigh on 80 per cent in the number of drug related deaths in
France.[101]
The zero tolerance organisations instead focus blindly on the fact
that the proportion of young people who
have tested some kind of drug is lower in
Sweden than it
is on the continent. No mention is ever made of the fact that the number of
heavy drug users in
Sweden lies at more or less the same
level as on the continent, that Swedish drug users present the highest incidence
of hepatitis-C anywhere in
Europe,[102] and so forth.
In addition the Swedish Commission of Inquiry into Drugs was heavily
influenced by the ZTOs. It was noted, for example, that drug related mortality
was higher in
Sweden than in the
Netherlands, but no attempt was made
to draw any conclusions as to why this might be the case. The Commission
commented on the risk-reduction policy in the
Netherlands, but
did not find that there was anything to be learned from this approach. The
dramatic reduction in drug related deaths in
France was not
even mentioned. Instead, the analysis on drug related mortality was concluded
with the statement that “According to the Commission’s assessment, measures
directed against problematic drug use in
its entirety constitute the only measures that may have a decisive effect on
reducing the number of drug related deaths over the longer term” (emphasis
added).[103] The Methadone programme, which all experts consider as having a
depressant effect on levels of mortality, was regarded as having “relatively
strict rules” which the Commission did not intend to change.
As is usually the case in the Swedish drug policy debate, it is the
plan, rather than the reality, that is important. We ignore the fact that the
level of mortality among those who fail to get into or are excluded from
methadone programmes is approaching ten per cent. Instead we place our faith in
cutting mortality by reducing levels of recruitment into heavy drug use.[104] The problem of course is that
even when recruitment declined during the 1980s, this failed to have an impact
on levels of drug-related deaths. (See diagrams 1-2 above). But the plan is
still applied.
Swedish drug policy is legitimated in particular by reference to the
United Nations drugs conventions. The member states party to these conventions
have committed themselves to follow them. The drug policy of the UN is based on
three such conventions, from 1961, 1971 and 1988.
The 1961 convention replacing previous conventions on narcotics (The
“Single Convention”)
This convention relates to the control of narcotic substances derived
from the opium poppy, cocaine leaf and cannabis plant. The convention brought
together and unified a number of previous international agreements on the
control of narcotics in a single regulatory system, and it applies to over 100
narcotic substances.
The 1971 Convention on Psychotropic
Substances
This convention was introduced to control the growing number of
psychotropic substances and includes amphetamines and many synthetic substances,
i.e. substances produced by chemical means.
The 1988 Narcotics Convention
This convention was primarily established in order to increase
control over the international drugs trade. It is also directed at the demand
for narcotics, however, through its demand that the purchase and possession of
the substances regulated in the two previous conventions be
criminalised.
The UN drugs conventions, like other UN conventions, should be viewed
as regulatory systems that have emerged in the context of a certain historical
situation and that have sometimes been established in a spirit of agreement,
sometimes following conflict. When cannabis was introduced into the Single
Convention, a number of developing countries unsuccessfully opposed this move,
amongst other things because they were afraid it would result in a shift to
alcohol consumption.[105]
Within the UN, there has been a tradition of north-south antagonism
in relation to the drugs issue. The southern countries, which constitute the
poorer producer nations, have a slightly different picture of how control policy
should be practised than do the richer, consumer countries. Countries such as
Peru do not really understand why
poor farmers’ harvests of coca leaf should be eradicated because the
U.S.A. has a cocaine problem. The
countries responsible for the supply of drugs made demands that the demand for
drugs should also be controlled within the consumer countries. These demands led
to the criminalisation of possession for personal consumption in the Narcotics
Convention of 1988.[106]
There is a further antagonism, this time between different sections
of the UN. The World Health Organisation, WHO, has proceeded from a harm
reduction perspective in relation to the drugs question. On the basis of its
health perspective, this organisation has amongst other things assumed a
positive position in relation to needle exchange programmes. Several research
projects have also been initiated. The WHO and its expert groups, in opposition
to the prevailing control policy, have called attention to alcohol and tobacco
as significantly greater problems than drugs and have questioned the harsh
criminalisation of softer drugs.[107]
Ongoing discussions within the UN and among its member states also
suggest the existence of problems related to the drug conventions and prevailing
policy. Despite recurrent, proud declarations about a drug free world, the
trends point towards an increase. To the extent that evaluations have been
conducted, there has been a tendency to emphasise the process rather than the
results. In certain cases, it is possible to point to programmes that have been
put into effect, such as the prevention of harvests, for example, but their
effects on the number of drug users are conspicuous by their absence. Issues
relating to the health problems associated with drug use lead to demands for
harm reduction. Several member states are also making demands that they be given
more space to deal with the drug problem in ways better adapted to conditions at
the local level and are looking for more openness in relation to questions of
regulation and decriminalisation. This would also provide more room for the
member states to relate to the drug problem on the basis of their own
situation.[108]
The UN conventions are also the result of political processes and
conflicts. There is a history behind their emergence and they are not of course
written in stone but are open to modification and may be changed in different
directions. The UN’s report on the world drug situation states that: “Their [the
Conventions’] strength derives from the breadth of consensus that inspired them
and from their foundation in international law; their weakness stems from their
status as a compromise solution for nations of widely diverse historical,
cultural and legal traditions, and from their relative difficulty of adaptation
to fast-changing conditions.” The UN report also emphasises that: “Laws – and
even the international Conventions – are not written in stone; they can be
changed when the democratic will of nations so wishes it.”[109]
Amongst other things, the UN conventions have been criticised for
forcing into place similar crime policy based solutions where solutions based on
medical and social policy would be more appropriate, and for making it more
difficult to take national and local conditions into
account.
As has been mentioned, however, the member states that have signed
the conventions are bound to follow them. At the same time, the conventions
leave room for interpretation, which is perhaps understandable given the
background of distinctive interests and traditions and of the fact that
agreement has been reached only on the basis of compromise. Nor are all the
countries agreed on how the conventions are to be understood.
Sweden and a number of other
countries, for example, argue that the Dutch coffee shops are in conflict with
the conventions. For her part,
Sweden interprets the conventions
very restrictively, by emphasising that all drug use is prohibited according to
the United Nations narcotics convention.
Sweden’s official position appears to
be that even consumption itself must be criminalised – an interpretation that is
shared by few other EU states.
In the context of an analysis of the UN’s narcotics conventions, a
group of researchers at the
University of
Gent in
Belgium have
made an assessment of what the member states are bound to do, and where there is
room for interpretation such that praxis may vary. The group point amongst other
things to the fact that the conventions do not require that the consumption of
drugs be criminalised, that administrative sanctions may be applied instead of
penal sanctions, that waivers of prosecution may be employed, that needle
exchange programmes are in breach of the conventions but may be permitted for
public health reasons, and that the UN may of course change both the
classification of various substances and the way the conventions are to be
applied. The general conclusions drawn by the group are as follows:[110]
“1. The United Nations Conventions as an international
framework
· The three United Nations drug Conventions provide an international
framework for the control of narcotic and psychotropic
substances.
· The United Nations Conventions adhere a more prohibitionist approach
to the drug problem. However, the United Nations “soft law”, the Council of
Europe, the European Community and the European Union tone down this
prohibitionist approach (e.g. new demand reduction
strategies).
· The United Nations Conventions are not self-executing. Consequently,
the implementation of the provision within these Conventions is left to the
states themselves. This inevitably involves interpretation.
2. Latitude
Evolving societal phenomena concerning the drug problem result in
changing strategies and legal approaches developed by
countries.
The room to manoeuvring available to the Parties within the present
United Nations Conventions allows them to develop a differentiated national drug
policy.
However, this latitude is not unlimited.
In general, the United Nations Conventions require a loyal
enforcement by the Parties.
More particularly, the main restriction of the United Nations
Conventions is situated at the level of criminalisation. Parties are obliged, to
criminalise possession, purchase and cultivation for personal consumption of
drugs. Therefore, it is clear that no decriminalisation of these offences is
possible.
However, the United Nations Conventions do not oblige the Parties to
criminalise the use of drugs.
As stated above, the United Nations Conventions do leave considerable
room for Parties to develop a differentiated national drug
policy.
- the imposing of sanctions is a matter within the domestic law of the
Party. This means Parties can choose between a penal and an administrative
reaction, leaving room for depenalisation of offences by the
Parties;
- the application of penal sanctions leave considerable possibilities
to the Parties to differentiate and individualise the
reactions;
- the United Nations Conventions provide for additional and alternative
measures (e.g. treatment and social reintegration) for conviction or punishment
on all levels of the criminal justice system. Moreover, the necessity of bridges
between the criminal justice system and treatment for drug abuse offenders is
stressed;
- at the prosecution level considerable room is left to the Parties to
develop a prosecution policy, making use of the expediency principle, as long as
the – systematic – use of this principle does not conflict with the spirit of
the Conventions;
- both at the sentencing and at the execution of sanctions levels, the
room to manoeuvre and to develop a differentiated national policy is even more
apparent, especially for offences related for personal
consumption.
For the pursuance of risk reduction strategies:
- exchange and distribution of needles and syringes violate the United
Nations Conventions in theory. However, they are considered to be permitted from
a public health point of view;
- both heroin prescription and methadone maintenance therapy are
allowed within the framework of 'medical and scientific
purposes';
- there is no clear guidance in relation to the compatibility of
injecting rooms with the United Nations Conventions. Special preconditions will
determine whether these strategies resort under the qualification risk
reduction;
- there is no clear guidance in relation to on-the-spot drug testing.
However, testing drugs can be argued to resort under the term 'medical and
scientific purposes'.
3. Room for reform
When Parties consider the latitude within the Conventions’ provisions
insufficient to differentiate their national policies, the Conventions provide
options to amend, to modify substances in the Schedules/Tables, to make
reservations and to denounce the Conventions.
Any Party can propose an amendment at any time. An amendment refers
to the formal alteration of Convention provisions affecting all the Parties. The
three UN Conventions lay down specific requirements with regard to this
procedure.
The modification of substances in the Schedules/Tables can be the
addition, the deletion, or the transfer of a substance from one schedule to
another. The procedures laid down in the three UN Conventions allow changing
both the list of classified narcotics and psychotropic substances, and the
regime applied to them.
A reservation enables a state to accept a Convention as a whole by
giving it the possibility not to apply certain provisions with which it does not
want to comply. In addition, any signatory state or contracting state has the
option of objecting to a reservation.
These procedures, that have to be made at the time of signature,
ratification or accession, are laid down in the 1961 and the 1971 Conventions.
The 1988 Convention contains no such provisions. Consequently, the reservation
procedure relies on the concerning provision of the 1969 Vienna Convention.
A denunciation is a declaration by a Party to a Convention by which
it purports to opt out of a Convention. The denunciation possibility is included
in the three UN Conventions.
One of the consequences of denouncing a Convention can be that the
Convention ceases to exist. However, the denunciation without creating an
alternative would risk being counterproductive.”
The goal of Swedish drug policy, i.e. a drug free society, was
established a quarter of a century ago. It has clearly not been achieved. Quite
the reverse; by comparison with the period when this goal was formulated, the
available indicators show that drug consumption has increased.
This increase in the use and abuse of drugs has taken place in spite
of a substantial expansion in control measures. Legislation in the areas of both
criminal law and compulsory treatment has undergone a continuous expansion.
There has also been a continuous increase in the number of police officers
working with drugs and in the number of persons given a prison sentence for drug
offences. It is difficult to argue that the additional control measures
introduced since the 1970s have had a positive effect on levels of drug abuse in
Sweden.
At the same time, this policy has involved a high level of costs. A
time-honoured, rational and humanist crime policy has been forced to give way in
relation to drugs. Legislation has been introduced that provides compulsory care
for adults precisely because they use drugs. The battle against drugs has tied
up justice system resources. An increasing number of drug users are in prison,
and without being given help with their drug abuse. The attitude towards
substitution treatment and needle exchange programmes has been so restrictive
that we cannot exclude the possibility that Swedish drug policy has contributed
to the rising number of drug related deaths.
The official Swedish arguments against a less restrictive policy are
that this would “send out the wrong signals”. By punishing the consumption of
drugs, by refusing to allow needle exchange programmes, by making complete
abstinence a requirement for the provision of housing, the intention is to
“emphasise the fact that society will not tolerate drugs”. This policy has been
defended by reference to its supposed deterrent effects on the general public.
But drug dependency is deterrence enough in itself. Nobody wants to be a drug
addict. On the other hand, the policy has entailed a high price, and one that
has not been paid by the general public but by the drug users. The policy
followed in
Sweden leads to a deterioration in
the living conditions of drug users and puts their lives and their health at
risk. These are already socially excluded individuals who are being refused
clean needles, who are not being given the help they need from the social
services, and who to a large extent are being made to spend their lives in
prison.
The slogan “a drug free
Sweden” blocks any insight into the
costs involved in Swedish drug policy. All policies involve costs, and these
must be weighed against the benefits. This is something that is self-evident in
all other policy areas. A total prohibition model does produce benefits, but at
a price. During the period of prohibition in the
U.S.A., alcohol
related liver cirrhosis mortality decreased. At the same time, organised crime
and the homicide rate increased dramatically.
Sweden chose
instead to follow a regulatory model, and managed to bring about a reduction in
levels of alcohol related harm without incurring more than moderate control
costs.
When faced with poor results, the zero tolerance model has nowhere to
go but to demand more zero tolerance. Over the last twenty years, Swedish drug
policy has been characterised by constant new demands for tougher sanctions,
more controls and expanded police measures. When these measures subsequently
show themselves not to produce the desired effects, the conclusion is that even
stiffer sanctions and further increases to levels of control are required.
Following the substantial increase in the use and abuse of drugs witnessed
during the 1990s, political parties and government inquiries are now proposing
the use of emetics, the drug testing of minors against the will of their parents
and life imprisonment.
Nobody can be sure which form of drug policy is the right one or
which methods give the greatest effect on levels of drug abuse whilst at the
same time involving the lowest costs. Models such as “a drug free society” or
“complete prohibition at any price”, however, reduce the chances of starting any
form of unprejudiced debate about an effective and humanist drug policy. A
debate of this kind needs to free itself from earlier conceptions and proceed
from the idea that drug use constitutes a risk behaviour. The question that
presents itself is then: How can we reduce drug related harms for the individual
and society without at the same time increasing the harms associated with drugs
control?
[1]
Drogutvecklingen i Sverige (Drug trends in Sweden). Report 2002. Stockholm:
Folkhälsoinstitutet/Centralförbundet för alkohol- och narkotikaupplysning,
2002.
[2] The term convicted refers to
persons who have been adjudged guilty of a crime by the justice
system.
[3]
Drogutvecklingen i Sverige. (Drug trends in Sweden). Report 2002. Stockholm:
Folkhälsoinstitutet/Centralförbundet för alkohol- och narkotikaupplysning,
2002.
[4] Kühlhorn, E.
Går brottsligheten att minska? (Can crime levels be reduced?) In: Minskad
brottslighet: till vilket pris? (Lower crime: at what price?) Stockholm:
rikspolisstyrelsen 1996.
[5]
Drogutvecklingen i Sverige (Drug trends in Sweden). Rapport 2002. Stockholm:
Folkhälsoinstitutet/Centralförbundet för alkohol- och narkotikaupplysning,
2002.
[6] Olsson, B.,
Adamsson Wahren, C. & Byqvist, S., Det tunga narkotikamissbrukets omfattning
i Sverige 1998. (The extent of heavy drug use in Sweden 1998.) Stockholm:
Centralförbundet för alkohol- och narkotikaupplysning, 2001
[7] A restrictive drug policy. The
Swedish experience.
Stockholm: Swedish National Institute of Public
Health, 1993.
[8] Lenke, L. & Olsson, B. Drugs on
prescription – The Swedish experiment of 1965-67 in retrospect, European Addiction Research, nr 4,
1998.
[9] Bejerot, N.
DN.debatt, Dagens Nyheter
1982-11-02.
[10] Lenke, L. & Olsson, B. Swedish
drug policy in perspective, in Derks, J., van Kalmthout, & Albrecht, H.-J.
(Eds.) Current and
future drug policy studies in Europe, Freibourg,
1999.
[11]
Brottsförebyggande rådet, Kriminalisering
av narkotikabruk – en utvärdering av rättsväsendets insatser. (The criminalisation of drug-use –
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[12] SOU 2000:126
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[40] Brå report
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[41] Brå report
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[56] For a more detailed description and
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[57] For a detailed examination of this
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[58] It was in the committee’s first
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[59]Bejerot, N. (1968). Narkotikafrågan och samhället. (The
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[60] FK 1968 no. 10:
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[63] Werkgroep verdovende middelen (1972)
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in European Union prisons. Lissabon: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs
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[78] Nilsson, A.
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Svensson, D. (2000). Levnadsförhållanden
bland vårdade narkomaner 1987-1994. (Living conditions among drug
addicts in care 1987-1994). MAX-projektet, delrapport 2,
Stockholm: CAN; Wacquant,
L. (2002). “Four strategies to curb carceral costs”, Studies in Political Economy nr 69, p.
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[79]
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49.
[80] Lenke, L & Olsson, B. (1999).
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drogbrottslighet: ett naturligt experiment inom narkotikapreventionen. (Measures against drug crime: a natural experiment in drug
prevention) Brå rapport 1996:4. Stockholm, Table 8.; Brottsförebyggande rådet
(2000) Kriminaliseringen av
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Stockholm, p. 6; 28 ff; Nilsson, M., Johansson, P. & Olsson, B. (2001). Heroindömda 17-29-åringar 1996.
(17-29 year olds
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[81] Hörnqvist,
Magnus, (forthcoming), “Ingen höjdare: anstaltsplacerade narkomaners syn på sin
situation”. (Nothing
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Kriminalvidenskab.
[82] Lag
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[83] Lander, I.,
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[84]
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Brå rapport 2000:20
Stockholm, p. 23ff. Prison and probation
service staff, or to be more precise the inmates’ appointed contact staff, were
also interviewed as to their perceptions. A larger proportion of these answered
that the inmates had received help in various areas. Hörnqvist (forthcoming); SOU 2000:126, Vägvalet. Slutbetänkande från
Narkotikakommissionen, (Choosing the path ahead. Final report of the Drugs
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[85] See, for
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narkomanvård – ett förslag till handlingsplan. (Measures to combat drugs. Research
based drug addict care – a proposal for an action plan),
Norrköping.
[86] Svensson,
B. (1996). Pundare, jonkare och
andra. (Speed-freaks, junkies and others)
Stockholm: Carlssons, p. 383; Hörnqvist
(forthcoming).
[87]
Brottsförebyggande rådet
(2002), Att lära ut ett nytt sätt att
tänka. Utvärdering
av Cognitive Skills-programmet i kriminalvården 1995-2000. (Teaching a
new way of thinking. Evaluation of the Cognitive Skills programme within the
prison and probation service 1995-2000). Brå rapport 2002:11.
Stockholm.
[88] The International Statistical
Classification of Diseases and Related Health
Problems.
[89] Annex to SOU 2000:126. PM no 3.
June 1999. p. 8. Narkotikakommissionen. Slutbetänkande.
“Vägval”. (Final report
of the Drugs Inquiry. “Choosing the path ahead”)
[90] Underlying causes of death. ICD 10
F11.2-F16.2 and F18.2-F19.2. New principles for classifying causes of death have
been introduced in the years 1958, 1969, 1987 and 1997. Comparisons across these
years ought therefore to be conducted with caution.
[91] Underlying and contributory causes
of death in accordance with the same codes as are referred to in note
3.
[92] Statistics reported by the Swedish
National Institute of Public Health to the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs
and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). ICD 10 F11, F12, F14, F15, F16, F18 and F19 all
with sub-codes 1-9.
[94] In the remainder of this text,
these organisations will be referred to as ZTOs –
Zero-Tolerance-Organisations.
[95] A movement of this kind can hardly
be said to exist in
Sweden. The recently formed
Swedish Users’
Association and the client organisation the National Association for Aid to Drug
Users (RFHL)
come closest.
[96] WHO – World Health Organization.
Regional Office for
Europe. Principles for
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[97] Nycander,
S. (1996). Svenskarna och spriten.
(The Swedes and their Liquor) Sober förlag. Malmö 1996.
[98] Lenke, L.
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samspelet mellan bruk av droger, brukets konsekvenser och formerna för deras
kontroll i ett historiskt och komparativt perspektiv. (Drinking patterns, temperance movements and drug policy – an
analysis of the interplay between drug use, its consequences and the forms by
which it is controlled viewed in a historical and comparative perspective). Sociologisk forskning. Nr
4/91.
[99] Ólafsdottir, H., Leifman, H.
Legalizing beer in
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[100] Rapport
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(Report from the
Government’s action group against drugs 1991. “We will NEVER surrender” p.
11)
[101] Heilig, in this anthology. “Created
50,000 drug abusers” hardly constitutes an adequate description, since the
majority of those who use this substance are drawn from the group of heroin
abusers.
[102] EMCDDAs annual report
2002.
[103] Annex to SOU 2000:126. PM no 3. June 1999. p. 45. Narkotikakommissionen. Slutbetänkande. “Vägval”. (Final report of the Drugs Inquiry.
“Choosing the path ahead”).
[104] As yet no reduction in levels of
new recruitment to the group of heavy drug users has been acheived. On the
contrary, recruitment increased dramatically during the 1990s (Olsson, B.,
Adamsson Wahren, C., Byqvist, S. Det tunga narkotikamissbrukets omfattning i
Sverige 1998. (The extent of heavy drug use in Sweden 1998) CAN.
Stockholm.
2001.
[105] Christie, N.
& Bruun, K. (2003). Den gode
fiende. (A suitable
enemy). 3rd revised edition.
Oslo:
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[106] De Ruyver, B. et al. (2002). Multidisciplinary drug Policies and the UN
Drug Treaties. Institute for International Research on Criminal Policy,
Ghent
University. Antwerpen:
Maklu.
[107] Jelsma, M. (forthcoming) Drugs in the UN system: an unwritten history
of the 1998 United Nations General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) on
drugs. International Journal of Drug Policy.
[108] "Change of Course, An Agenda for
Vienna"; Drugs
& Conflict Debate Papers No. 6, Transnational Institute,
Amsterdam, March
2003.
[109] World Drug Report. United Nations
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Oxford:
Oxford
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[110] De Ruyver, B.
et al. (2002).
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