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Social
and Cultural Analyses
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Cohen,
Peter (1994), The case of the two Dutch drug policy commissions.
An exercise in harm reduction 1968-1976. Paper presented at the
5th International Conference on the Reduction of Drug related Harm,
7-11 March 1994, Addiction Research Foundation, Toronto. Revised in
1996.
© Copyright 1994, 1996 Peter Cohen. All rights reserved.
The case of
the two Dutch drug policy commissions
An exercise
in harm reduction 1968-1976
Peter
Cohen
Introduction
In
the unruly times of the sixties, when a series of different political
movements had unsettled the classic paternalistic ruling style in the
Netherlands, youth had suddenly started to dance to strange music on
strange intoxications. Sons and daughters of doctors, bricklayers, judges
and bank employees smoked a strange smelling weed called marihuana.
According to the law this was forbidden, and according to mostly American
sources, marihuana provoked all kinds of psychic disturbance. Even worse,
marihuana hunger was unsatisfiable and led to addiction, not only to
the weed itself but also to other illicit drugs like cocaine and morphine.
At the onset of
marihuana smoking and drug policy in the Netherlands, the authorities
of the law and of medicine spoke out against marihuana use and described
it as a dangerous evil. (Maalsté, 1993)[1]
However, numbers of (mostly cannabis) users increased as did the difficulties
of law enforcement against them. This led to a growing debate in professional
journals and in the daily papers about the merits of the conventional
views on drug use. At the end of the sixties time was ripe for a typical
Dutch solution of very difficult problems, the setting up of a Commission.[2]
This presentation
will deal with two important commissions that were set up at the end
of the sixties with a small overlap in time. First the composition of
both commissions will be described, then their way of analyzing the
problem and their recommendations, to conclude with a few observations
of why these commissions have been so influential and successful from
a harm reduction point of view.[3]
The drug commissions,
1968-1972
The first commission
was set up in 1968 by the National Federation of Mental Health Organizations,
a kind of umbrella organization. In the Netherlands, Mental Health used
to be organized in a myriad of private and public-private settings along
the lines of the different religious and political denominations. The
previous year the National Federation of Mental Health Organizations
had commissioned extensive research among drug users in the Netherlands[4].
It also set up a drug policy commission of which the broadly defined
task was "to clarify factors that are associated with the use of
drugs, to give insight into the phenomenon as a whole, and to suggest
proposals for a rational policy..." (Hulsman, 1971).[5]
The members of the commission included law enforcement officials, alcohol
treatment experts, psychiatrists, a drug use researcher and a sociologist.
The commission was chaired by Louk Hulsman, a professor of criminal
law at the University of Rotterdam who was very critical towards the
use criminal law in general. This Commission presented its final report
in October 1971. However, drafts of the final report circulated before
this date.
Also in 1968 the
Under secretary of Health, a medical man himself and worried about the
use of marihuana, set up a State Commission. After an unsuccessful chairmanship
of an Inspector of Mental Health, it was chaired from 1970 by Pieter
Baan, a Chief Inspector of Mental Health.[6]
This Commission was asked "to investigate causes of increasing
drug use, how to confront irresponsible use of drugs, and to propose
a treatment system for those who developed dependence of these drugs".[7]
The Hulsman and Baan commission had some members in common. In both
commissions we find Herman Cohen (a researcher of drug use trained in
medical sociology), Mr. Hartsuiker (a public prosecutor) Mr. Krauweel
(the Head of the Jellinek Alcohol Treatment Clinic in Amsterdam) and
Mr. Witte (chief of the Forensic Laboratory of the Ministry of Justice).
In the Baan commission we find a few top officials of the Ministry of
Justice, the Chief of Police of Amsterdam, a few psychiatrists and two
sociologists who did not participate in the Hulsman commission. The
final report of the Baan commission was presented to the Minister of
Health in February 1972. Four years later, in 1976 the new Opium Law
was adopted, including the articles that made decriminalization[8]
of cannabis use possible, as advocated by the Baan Commission.
The Hulsman Commission
The report of the
Hulsman Commission is the most theoretical of the two. It gave an analysis
of drug use, the social mechanisms behind drug problems, the limited
power of criminal law in these issues and outlines of a future drug
policy for the Netherlands.
It analyzed drugs
fundamentally from a heuristic point of view, in which the pharmacological
properties of drugs were integrated in set and setting, mostly conceptualized
as the 'drug scene'. Herman Cohen was responsible for this innovative
approach. He was the only one who had been researching drug use empirically
from within, as it existed in the Netherlands. He was well acquainted
with the international social scientific literature on drug use. This
gave him a substantial authority. About opiates, the Hulsman report
writes that these substances may give physical addiction. But also:
"Physiological,
psychological and sociological factors may keep a user connected to
opiates, and if one detoxifies a heavy user, one does not have a 'normal'
individual but an unhappy ex junky, who maneuvers with difficulty in
a huge emptiness." (p. 16).
The Hulsman report
examines different risks associated with different substances as they
occur in different use patterns. As its conclusion, the Hulsman Commission
states that:
"The
different drugs have the risk in common that one does not restrict oneself
to limited use, but that one evolves to long-lasting and intensive use.
In that case they are harmful" (p 19).
This insight, that
illicit drugs can be used in a controlled and limited way, was just
as unconventional in those days as it is now. Furthermore, the report
shows the negative effects of marginalising drug using sub cultures.
It also describes imprisonment of drug users as conflicting with the
intended effect of separating the user from the heavier types of drug
using subcultures. As a clarification of this point the Commission quotes
Herman Cohen that there is no evidence for a "stepping stone"
like sequence of different drug use. However, becoming a member of a
(marginal) drug scene or drug use-sub culture may make a cannabis user
familiar with the existence of other drugs and other patterns of use.
Here we see the roots of an important concept in present-day drug policy
in the Netherlands: separation of the demand and the supply sides of
different drug markets. The basic assumption underlying this concept
is that one kind of drug user (of e.g. heroin) will 'contaminate' another
kind of drug user (of e.g. cannabis) when the two kinds of drug use
are forced into one marginalised user sub culture because the markets
of two drugs can only jointly exist in one criminal arena.
About the use of
State power, the Hulsman report says that
"the
State can not have a disapproving point of view only on the ground that
a certain behavior is not fitting in the concepts of life of those who
carry State power" (p.40).
"If an individual makes a choice that may be dangerous to herself
as a private person (e.g. someone refuses blood transfusions) no one
should deny her this right. Even when such behavior might endanger others
(e.g. parents who do not allow their children to be vaccinated even
if a danger for infection exists) the right of a personal choice will
not be denied" (p.42).
Here the Hulsman
Commission refers to a dearly won right of certain religious groups
in the Netherlands to refuse vaccination for religious reasons.
About law enforcement
against drug trafficking, the Commission states that once on this road,
police forces will have to be
"constantly
enlarged to keep pace with the never ending escalation" (p. 49).
"If we opt for criminal law as the central means for opposing drug
use, this option is inadequate and therefor also extremely dangerous.
Time after time it will show that the means will fall short, upon which
those who favor punishment will plead for increase of law enforcement,
until it will be amplified a hundred fold from the present situation.
........ This will boost polarization between the different parts of
our society and can result in increased violence" (p. 51).
The Commission says
that full decriminalization is the right policy in the long run, but
this should be done gradually.
The discussion of
the 70 pages of the Hulsman report will be finished by summarizing its
policy recommendations for the short term:
- Use of cannabis
and the possession of small quantities be taken out of criminal law
straight away . Production and distribution should for the time being
remain within criminal law but as a misdemeanor.
- Use and possession
of other drugs will remain in the sphere of criminal law, as a misdemeanor,
but in the long run has to be liberated completely.
- Those who run
into difficulties with their drug use should have adequate treatment
institutions at their disposal.
An interesting detail
of the proposals for the short term is that production of non cannabis
drugs has to remain within criminal law as an offense. The background
of this conclusion is not provided. It likely reflects the perspective
of the Commission on gradual long term decriminalization of all drug
use.
The report strongly
pleads for stepped up research efforts in this field, and the creation
of a system for dissemination of information about drugs, and drug treatment
evaluation.
The Hulsman report
still reads as a useful, rationally argumented and humane blueprint
of general drug policy principles. It fully deserves translation into
English.
The Baan commission
The report of the
Baan commission gives a short overview of risks that are associated
with the use of drugs, and divides these risks into physical damage,
psychological damage and social damage. Quite consistently the Commission
includes alcohol and tobacco in its overview.
The report describes
the social aspects of drug use and small drug trade in the Netherlands,
showing that the special characteristics of youth culture and sub culture
are important determinants of the functions drug use have. If society,
according to the Baan report, stigmatizes deviant behavior by punitive
measures, the probability of intensification of this behavior is a serious
danger. This will initiate a spiral that will make return of the individual
to a socially accepted life style increasingly difficult (p.26).
Further the Baan
report discusses research results that counter hypotheses of drug use
stemming from social misery or pathology. It literally quotes the research
finding of a Dutch sociologist that drug using youths
"not only
read more about drugs but also read more about other things than drugs:
art, politics, science and philosophy than youths from the two control
groups" (p.27).
Another topic the
report deals with is the epidemiology of drug use in the Netherlands,
and the demographic characteristics of users. It concludes that much
drug use is short lasting experimentation by young persons. Differences
between metropolitan and non metropolitan areas are quickly diminishing
and are expected to disappear completely. According to the Baan report,
cannabis use does not lead directly to other drug use. However, the
report quotes an American source in showing that laws that declare cannabis
an illegal drug, will promote contacts between cannabis users and those
who use heavier substances. This may lead to multiple drug use. Like
the Hulsman report Baan proposes the separation of drug using subcultures
which has a particular social scientific perspective at its base.[9]
In relation to law
enforcement the Baan Commission quotes a 1970 report by the Public Prosecutors
Office in which criminal law is described as inadequate towards drug
users. Users will be served better by drug information and prevention
efforts than by prosecution.
One of the longer
chapters of the Baan report is dedicated to cannabis, because, as Herman
Cohen remarked 25 years later
"the
Commission was firmly dedicated to ending this mess of youngsters going
to prison for a few grams of hash".[10]
The report describes
the use of cannabis products as relatively benign and the health risks
as relatively limited. If sometimes unusual behavior of cannabis consuming
youth is seen, this is more considered a result of specific sub cultural
norms and ideologies, than of pharmacology. But, cannabis use when driving
or when operating machines in factories, is "not responsible".
"Consumption [of cannabis] without risks for the individual or
society can only take place during recreation" (p. 59).
The report proposes
to design a 'danger scale' of drugs, in which concepts like 'soft' use
and 'hard' use of a drug are incorporated. The Baan Commission adds
as a comment that still is as unusual as to the point: a danger scale
that only takes pharmacological properties of a substance into account
"can not be an operational guide line for the State" (p.
64).
Such a scale should
divide drugs into those with 'acceptable' and those with 'unacceptable
risks'. The Commission states explicitly that controlled use of drugs
is possible. Basis for State intervention should be to try to prevent
the use of those drugs that present most risks. Since opinions on risks
are so diverse between experts, this topic should be further investigated.[11]
For cannabis use
and trade a number of options are discussed. A suggestion is given to
look at cannabis trade below a quarter of kilogram as a misdemeanor
only. The report discusses legal supply of cannabis as a means of preventing
the development of cannabis user sub cultures that will reinforce `hard'
patterns of use, and multiple drug use. But the Commission considers
this as against the spirit of the 1961 Single Convention on Drugs.[12]
Although it proposes to try to change the Single Convention on this
issue (of cannabis use and trafficking) it considers waiting for uncertain
treaty changes as too impractical for the short term goals the commission
wants to reach.
About drugs other
than cannabis, the Baan report has very little to offer. In spite of
its remarks about the many complexities and uncertainties of rating
the pharmacological and other potential dangers a substance, it treats
all other drugs than cannabis as substances "with unacceptable
risks". (p 67) Trafficking these drug will have to remain an offense.
However, for users
of such drugs "confrontation with criminal law is not an adequate
approach" (p 68). For the time being, the Commission proposes to
look at use of these drugs as an offense, with complete decriminalization
as a policy goal from the point in time on that a good treatment system
has been created. Until then criminal law should be used as a tool for
maneuvering heavy user-patients into treatment.[13]
Why did the Baan
report succeed in shaping Dutch Drug policy?[14]
To look for an answer
to the question: "why did the Baan Commission (backed up by the
more radical Hulsman report) succeed in shaping Dutch Drug Policy",
we have to perceive the Baan Commission in the setting of the time in
which it was asked to perform its task.
Three possible factors
could be relevant for an answer to this question:
-
Hulsman gives
an important clue where he draws attention to the period of his
employment at the Ministry of Justice. In 1959 he wrote a memo for
the Minister of Justice about the draft Single Convention that had
been sent to the Dutch government for comment. He states that the
harsh law enforcement approach of the draft was perceived as "counter
to our criminal law policies at the time". (Maalsté,
1993, p140-141). At the end of the fifties but certainly in the
sixties official policy was to restrict the reach of law enforcement,
to prevent law breaking by adequate social policies, and to keep
law breakers out of prison as much as possible. We should not forget
that in those days, little enthusiasm for expanding the realm of
criminal law was a mainstream ideological background to the drug
policy issue. This means that when the Hulsman and Baan Commissions
were writing their reports at the end of the sixties, all participating
high officials of the Ministry of Justice plus the Public Prosecution
did not discover the importance of diminishing the role of criminal
law, they simply applied it.
-
The second important
aspect for understanding the relative success of the policy recommendations
by Baan is the social and publicity climate around cannabis use
in that period. In 1969 the national and regional papers had published
conspicuous articles on the results of Herman Cohen's survey of
about a thousand drug users in the country. His conclusion was that
addiction is a rare phenomenon, that most drug use occurs with persons
of a relatively high level of education, and that (the threat of)
imprisonment is the most harmful of all consequences of drug use.[15]
The conservative
'Elsevier', a nation wide weekly, reported in July 1970 extensively
on drug use behavior of a large crowd at an open air pop concert
in Rotterdam.[16]
It interviewed treatment experts present at the site to deliver
assistance when needed, and a lot of people associated with drug
policy, including the leading MP's of the public health and justice
sub commissions in Parliament. The conclusion of all these interviews
was that drug use is not a problem in the Netherlands, that cannabis
users are not 'addicts' but nice and controlled folks. An interesting
detail of this article is that both police spokespeople and public
prosecutors seem to anticipate more formal changes to be expected
in liberalizing drug legislation.
During the Parliamentary
discussions on the Budget in 1970, a Member of the large Labour
Party confronted the Under secretary of Public Health with the pressing
question that he "uses all his influence to prevent imprisonment
of any drug user". Moreover, the MP said: "Available research
results show that marihuana and hashish do not belong in the Opium
Law".[17] "We
request the Under secretary to bring the topic of cannabis legalization
into consultation with the Ministry of Justice".[18]
At the time
Mrs. Padt-Jansen asked these questions the Baan Commission had just
been expanded to its final composition and was working on its final
report.
These quotes
serve to illustrate that for many in the country cannabis had to
be lifted out of the sphere of law enforcement. The two commissions
did not have to invent this, exactly as was the case with a non
law enforcement approach to social problems in general.
During the preparation
of the new Opium Law, after the report of the Baan Commission had
been presented to the Cabinet, the Minister of Justice (a young
law professor and progressive Catholic, Prof. van Agt) found the
Baan report too conservative! Prof. van Agt had even written decriminalization
of drugs into the party program of the Catholic Party.[19]
The reason that the Cabinet in which he took part accepted increased
criminalisation of non cannabis drugs was, according to Hulsman,
the Arab oil boycott of the Netherlands.[20]
This made the Netherlands so dependent of neighboring countries
for its oil supply, that strong pressure of the Ministries of Foreign
Affairs and Economic Affairs forced van Agt and the Cabinet to keep
drug use within the realm of criminal law and to increase non cannabis
drug penalties from a maximum of four years imprisonment to twelve.
If the new Dutch law in this area would be too unacceptable to Germany
and the UK, they might reconsider their assistance with oil deliveries
to the Netherlands. This alleged fear, based on an unforeseen complication
of international oil politics, had nothing to do with other legal
constraints as found in the Single Convention of 1961.[21]
This means that decriminalizing cannabis use and retail selling,
considered by all as the most important function of a new Drug Law,
was bought for the price of a more severe criminal law involvement
for other drug trafficking. We should not exclude however that paying
this price was understood as an unimportant cosmetic move. Non cannabis
drug use was, in the early seventies, not a problem. Then why not
use a little cosmetics, to make the decriminalization of cannabis
a bit more palatable for foreign (and possibly domestic) opponents?[22]
The main purpose
of remodeling the Opium Law was not to introduce a fundamentally
different drug policy [perceived as impossible for the time because
of existing global agreements], but to satisfy then existing needs
to keep cannabis users out of prison. Keeping law breakers
out of prison as much as possible already was accepted social policy.
Only a modest change, official discrimination between "drugs
with acceptable risks" and those with "unacceptable risks"
was needed to enable the new Law, adopted in 1976, to fulfill that
purpose.
-
A possible third
reason for the success of the two Commissions has to do with the
limited experience in the Netherlands with prohibitive drug policies.
Drug policy
experience was not only limited, it was also part of a distant past.
In the Dutch Indies a profitable and highly regulated policy was
developed on opium for smoking. In this State run monopoly opium
licenses were sold to the highest bidders (mostly Chinese) who were
then allowed to sell opium to all who wanted it.[23]
Later, Chinese immigrants in the Netherlands were allowed to smoke
opium till well into the sixties, only in their own house or opium
dens. This custom went undisturbed and practically unseen by the
alcohol culture around them. For the few explorers during the sixties
into the unknown worlds of opium dreams (students, artists and weird
university professors) opium was cheap and easy to be had from this
enclave.
The global opium
treaties that slowly developed since 1911 did not stop the Netherlands
to continue their opium policy within the Dutch Indies, until the
Japanese invaded during WW II . The American Government forced the
Netherlands to promise to cease its Opium regime in the Dutch Indies
under the threat that no support would otherwise be given to ousting
the Japanese from the Dutch East Indies.[24]
When global treaties were designed from 1911 on and later, The Netherlands
cooperated by signing treaties on cocaine, cannabis, opium, heroin
and morphine, but not because drugs were a problem for them. Drugs
had never been experienced as a problem within the Netherlands because
their use was almost unknown: opium use in the colonies was considered
well confined to the locals and at most a foreign vice. Therefore
the Treaties were signed because of opportunism and the requirements
of global diplomacy but without any internal national motivation
behind it. In contrast with other countries, like the UK or the
USA, the Netherlands had never been forced to look for solutions
to (true or perceived) local or national drug use epidemics, with
the exception of alcohol. In the field of alcohol, prohibition was
considered but never adopted. This implied an absence of prohibitive
drug policy models and a presence of a certain 'naiveté'
in these matters. This naiveté remained till into the Sixties
and allowed drug policy inventors in the Netherlands to look at
foreign drug policy ideologies from a detached perspective, certainly
as far as cannabis was concerned. The same absence of experience
may be at the base of the relative lack of concern for the rather
'theoretical' law enforcement measures in relation to non
cannabis drug use proposed by Baan. We have to remember that in
the late Sixties such use was even more uncommon than later, in
the Seventies and Eighties.
In summary: at the
time of the Baan report, it was mainstream thinking that criminal law
should be kept as restricted as possible. This was an innovation that
was made before drug legislation had to be adjusted. This considerably
eased the way for decriminalizing cannabis use, a drug policy goal that
had already made itself felt before the Commissions started their work.
A 'proper' sacrifice was made to foreign and domestic opponents, by
increasing maximum punishment for trafficking of `drugs with unacceptable
risks' to the atypically high figure of 12 years. This increased punishment
probably was more a cosmetic move than a choice grounded in principle,
the more so since non cannabis drug use was not a problem at
the time or ever before.
Relevance of the
Commissions for present day drug policies in the Netherlands
The reports of the
Hulsman and Baan commissions did what was expected of them. The underlying
arguments (e.g. for not arresting individual drug users[25]
and the counter productive potential of criminal law in this area) were
so solid they stand till this day.
Somehow the Dutch
practice of not arresting individual drug users - unless they cause
social nuisance or show criminal behavior- has become so normal, that
the reasons why it originated went forgotten.[26]
In the period after
the two Commissions prepared their reports a lot has changed in the
Dutch drug scene. Heroin was introduced in 1972 after the police stopped
opium sales, and became the focus of some Surinamese immigrants. Heroin
also became the drug of a small part of Dutch white youth who found
no link with the highly regulated labor market in this country. Like
in other industrial countries heavy heroin use led to social downfall
and marginalisation. Heroin use prevalence has always been very low,
and the proportion of street dwelling junkies among heroin users is
low as well. However, their conspicuous presence has etched a highly
undesirable image of heroin on the public mind.[27]
Nonconspicuous and
occasional use of opiates (mainly heroin) simply does not exist in both
public and expert opinion, although it does occur certainly in Amsterdam.[28]
Cocaine, introduced
in the early seventies as well, and peaking in the period 1982-1985,
is now an established albeit not widely used substance in the Dutch
capital. Seven percent of the Amsterdam adult population over 12 years
has used this substance (Sandwijk et al 1995).[29]
MDMA or XTC appeared in the mid eighties.
Cannabis use has
almost 'normalized' in the Dutch cities in the sense that it is culturally
more or less accepted, and certainly no longer taboo. High quality figures
for cannabis use prevalence in the Dutch population are non existent
except for Amsterdam.[30]
In the Capital, life time experience with cannabis is highest in the
age cohort 20-24 years (50%), and 29% in the adult household population-
12 years and older- as a whole (Sandwijk et al 1995).[31]
The heritage of
the two Commissions is most strongly felt in the cannabis scene. The
public fears about cannabis are substantially lower in the Netherlands
than elsewhere although , as for instance in the case of legalized abortion,
fractions of the population deplore our present policies.[32]
The theoretical notions and the scientific analysis of drug use as made
in the report of the Hulsman Commission has remained relevant. What
we need is to reflect on these notions and re- apply them to today's
drug situation.
Thanks to the two
Commissions and the Dutch system of accessible health care and housing
for all, modern drug policy discussion in the Netherlands has been deeply
influenced by 'harm reduction'. Enabling the notion of harm reduction
to play a role in drug policy is an important step away from the drug-political
fundamentalism of the bureaucracies that expand, amplify and control
the obsolete UN. drug treaties. What is needed however is more emphasis
on community drug use data that show that for most persons drug use,
as is the case with alcohol, is a matter of choice and leisure, not
of compulsion.
The task for
progressive politicians is to help find a way to convince society to
consider drug use as a choice people are free to make and to reform
the function of the State in the field of drug policy as a provider
of harm reducing conditions. This task existed before in such diverse
issues as traffic regulations, abortion, divorce, alcohol distribution
or - many years ago - religious freedom.
References
- Nicole
Maalsté: Het kruid, de krant, de kroongetuigen. De geschiedenis
van hennep 1950-1970. Stichting WGU,Utrecht 1993. ISBN 90-71772-25-X.
- See
for an extensive analysis of the beginning of modern Dutch drug
policy Ed Leuw: "Initial construction and development of the
official Dutch drug Policy". In Ed Leuw and I. Haen Marshall
(Eds.) "Between Prohibition and Legalization. The Dutch
Experiment in Drug Policy". Kugler Publications Amsterdam
/ New York 1994.
- This
chapter is a later version of a presentation at the Harm Reduction
Conference, Toronto march 1994. After completing it (May 1996) I
asked Marcel de Kort Ph.D. to comment. I thank him for his remarks
and for his reference to Marcel de Kort: The Dutch Cannabis Debate,
1968-1967. In the Journal of Drug Issues 24 (1994) 3 pp 417.
- The
investigator, Herman Cohen, a psychologist by training, worked at
the Medical Faculty, Institute of Medical Sociology, University
of Amsterdam. Cohen was one of the members of both the Hulsman commission
and the Baan commission.
- Louk
Hulsman. 'Ruimte in het drugbeleid'. Boom Meppel, 1971. page
5.
- Health
care in the Netherlands is divided into a number of areas, each
having its own Inspection Structure. Addiction treatment has its
own Inspection, like dental health, physical health, etc.
- Achtergronden
en risico's van druggebruik. Staatsuitgeverij Den Haag 1972.
p. vii. (Backgrounds and risks of drug use).
- Decriminalization
means to render former criminal behaviour or act exempt of penal
law consequences.
- Looking
at this thesis from empirical evidence now-after more than 20 years
of factual decriminalization-, one can observe the following: In
Amsterdam drugs like cocaine and heroin are only used by persons
who have some experience with cannabis. Life time prevalence of
cocaine among cannabis users is just under 23% (versus 7% in the
population as a whole), and of heroin 4% (versus 2%). The large
majority of cannabis users has no experience at all with other drugs.
Last 30 days use of other drugs is very low among cannabis users
(2% for cocaine and 0.2% for heroin). The idea that decriminalizing
cannabis and other drugs for individual use would be followed by
explosions of other drug use, was not forecast by the commissions,
and as appears, rightly so. cf. P. Cohen Cannabis use in Amsterdam
A lecture given in Utrecht June 1995.
- Herman
Cohen, Feb. 20th 1994, personal communication.
- This
has not been done. In the last paper written by a Dutch government
on drug policy, the drugs with acceptable and unacceptable risks
are still exactly the same as they were in the Baan commission.
cf. Drug Policy in The Netherlands; Continuity and Change
The Hague Sept. 1995. I criticized the Government Drug Policy Paper
on this point in Vrij Nederland, 21 October 1995, page 18-19.
- The
so called Single Convention of 1961 refers to a global Drug control
treaty concluded in New York in 1961. Its purpose was to bring the
several drug control treaties nations agreed upon since 1911 under
one single heading.
- We
should understand this rather blunt and opportunistic approach towards
non cannabis drugs as the expression of a situation in which little
non cannabis use occurred. Some LSD use was found, like amphetamine,
but consumers of these drugs were considered a small minority among
drug users. Opium was used by a small minority of all illicit drug
users, of whom in the course of 1972 a still smaller minority would
switch to heroin after the Amsterdam police cut off opium supply.
Among frequent drug users Cohen found 20% opiate use (Baan,
p.29) It is not clear if this figure reflected current use of opiates
or life time prevalence.
- I
have used the verb 'shaping' rather than 'changing' because the
initial prohibitive responses to drug use were more an automatic
reaction with the help of the spirit of the law than a policy. We
may therefor see the drug policy system after Baan as an argued
policy and no longer as a non-shaped automatism.
- Cohen,
H. (1968) 'Drugs, druggebruikers en drugscene.' Samson Alphen
a/d Rijn.
- Elsevier
(weekly magazine), 11 July 1970, pages 13-19.
- The
"Opium Law" [Dutch: 'Opium wet'] is the name for the Dutch
Dangerous Drugs Act.
- Parliamentary
Session 1969-1970, 40th meeting, 3d Feb. 1970. Handelingen page
1,959, intervention by Mrs. Padt-Jansen, MP.
- Hulsman,
personal communication, February 22nd 1994.
- About
the same reasons were given to Eric Fromberg by the then Minister
of Health, Mrs. Irene Vorrink. cf. Eric Fromberg: Dutch Drug
Policy: past present and future paper presented at the 7th International
Conference of the Drug Policy Foundation, Washington 17-20 Nov.
1994.
- Dutch
policy in those days even led to not signing the Vienna 1971 Psychotropic
Substances Convention. Signing took place much later, spring 1993.
- The
same use of cosmetic moves was made by the Dutch Government in 1995
when it proposed to cut down sales to private persons in coffeeshops
from 30 grams of cannabis to 5. Most consumers never buy more than
a few grams, let alone 30. But,the reason was to placate French
critics.
- Marcel
de Kort states that among 60 million inhabitants of the then Dutch
Indies, about 260.00 persons were regular opium smokers, most of
which were well to do Chinese. Lecture in the Pauluskerk, April
1, 1996.
- Marcel
de Kort, 1995: Tussen patient en delinquent. Geschiedenis van
het Nederlandse drugbeleid Dissertation Erasmus University Rotterdam
(Between patient and criminal. History of Dutch drug policy).
- This
policy applies to all drugs, not only to cannabis.
- They
were reconfirmed, albeit hidden, in the most recent policy paper
Drug Policy in The Netherlands; Continuity and Change, The
Hague Sept. 1995. One of the consequences of the policy that large
scale production and trafficking should be suppressed but individual
drug use should not, is the subsidy State institutions pay to organizations
that check so called Ecstasy pills at the entrance of raves (dance
festivities). Consumers will bring their MDMA (XTC) pills there
for checking - free of charge - if they suspect irregularities.
Also the Department of Health issued a set of guide lines that Municipalities
have to follow when checking the quality of raves where xtc use
is assumed to occur. This is considered wise prevention of risks.
At the same time Law Enforcement works hard to locate and dismantle
xtc laboratories, thereby driving xtc production and wholesale activities
underground. This enlarges the dangers of 'impure' xtc pills to
be marketed, something that is considered very risky for the individual
user! So, Harm Reduction in the sphere of xtc consumption is reduced
in scope and quality because of the dominant presence of Law Enforcement
in this area. Legislation, tied up as it is to international agreements
and international cooperation between law enforcement institutions,
can not be adjusted to harm reduction views on drug policy.
- The
different kinds of heavy opiate users in Amsterdam are well described
in Martin Grapendaal, Ed Leuw and Hans Nelen, 1995, A world of
opportunities. Lifestyle and economic behaviour of heroin addicts
in Amsterdam. State University of New York Press.
- In
the age cohort 18-42 years of the adult population of Amsterdam
we found in 1991 9% life time opiate experience (all licit
opiates included). Among a representative sample of community based
non deviant cocaine users in the same age category and the same
year this figure is 40% . Although last 30 days use is far lower
than life time experience, these figures show that occasional opiate
use occurs. cf. Cohen, Peter and Sas, Arjan: Cocaine use in Amsterdam
II. University of Amsterdam 1995. Recent heroin use is so low
in the household population as a whole (last 30 day use around one
or two tenths of a percent in Amsterdam), that it is almost irrelevant
for an overview of drug use.
- Sandwijk,
P., Cohen, P , Musterd, S. and Langemeijer, M.: Licit and illicit
drug use in Amsterdam. Report of a household survey in 1994 on the
prevalence of drug use among the population of 12 years and older.
University of Amsterdam 1995.
- NIPO,
a large Gallup type research Institute in Amsterdam, found in 1982
life time cannabis use prevalence of 9% in a national sample of
respondents of 18 year and older (N= 1,089), in 1992 it found 12
% (N=1,123). In 1993 it found again 9% (N=1,635, 12 years and older).
NIPO Press Release Archive Service, Amsterdam 1996 (with thanks
to Henk Foekema, M.A.) See for an overview of almost all available
cannabis use data in the Netherlands Dirk Korf,1 995: Dutch Treat.
Formal control and illicit drug use in the Netherlands. Dissertation
University of Amsterdam. Thesis Publishers Amsterdam.
- Since
our first household survey in Amsterdam, life time experience with
cannabis has risen from 23% in 1987 to 29% in 1994 (N=4,400). Because
last 12 month and last 30 day consumption has remained stable (at
10% resp, 6%) we assume that the rise in Lifetime Prevalence is
due to deceasing of the elderly. According to the mayor of Amsterdam,
the city has 380 outlets for cannabis type drugs, so called coffeeshops
(S. Patijn, in a presentation to a delegation of German judges and
prosecutors, cityhall, 25th April 1996).
- Of
the Dutch public, 50% thinks that marihuana is dangerous versus
83% in neighboring Germany. For heroin these figures are 90% versus
96%. Eurobarometer, Intra Europe report, 22 Oct. 1992. Brussels,
Belgium. In a national survey in 1996 (N=1139), NIPO found that
52% of the total Dutch population agrees to open selling of cannabis
(of which about half wants to legalize fully). In the combined respondents
of the cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague this figure
rises to 66%. NIPO, Telepanel CO 29, Amsterdam April 1996. (with
thanks to Henk Foekema, MA).
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