This article engages in the debate surrounding decriminalisation of drug use and whether this is a possible solution to the problem of druguse in South Africa – a question becoming more prevalent in global discussions about drug policy and its efficacy. We argue that two aspects must be addressed when evaluating a policy: its philosophical justification and its efficacy. We find that criminalising drugs may be justified by the public harm principle, but it does not effectively achieve the purpose of preventing and decreasing drug use and associated burdens. Thus, we argue that prohibition is a constitutional limitation, but does not necessarily achieve its purpose in the least repressive or most effective way. Finally, we suggest that...
From the closure of London’s nightclub Fabric to Duterte’s drug war, law enforcement has become the ...
In the past ten years, the use of low-grade heroin (known as whoonga or nyaope) by people from margi...
There is an ongoing national debate around cannabis policy. This brief position statement by the Exe...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
The March 2011 Anti-Substance Abuse Summit in Durban continued the outdated approach to policy aroun...
Every year, hundreds of millions of people around the world use illicit drugs. Many do so for enjoym...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
African policy makers find themselves confronted by a phenomenon of rising substance use particularl...
This paper examines the debate surrounding the trend of global movements away from prohibition and t...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. Background: The strong symbolic value of illicit drug use makes it a contested ...
This report argues that this rationale for continuing with an enforcement-led approach to drugs is p...
This paper examines the debate surrounding the trend of global movements away from prohibition and t...
In this paper I describe the nature of my interest in drug policy; discuss questions about whether a...
From over-the-counter cough syrups and prescribed painkillers to street economies of heroin and fent...
From the closure of London’s nightclub Fabric to Duterte’s drug war, law enforcement has become the ...
In the past ten years, the use of low-grade heroin (known as whoonga or nyaope) by people from margi...
There is an ongoing national debate around cannabis policy. This brief position statement by the Exe...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
The March 2011 Anti-Substance Abuse Summit in Durban continued the outdated approach to policy aroun...
Every year, hundreds of millions of people around the world use illicit drugs. Many do so for enjoym...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
It appears to be a time of turbulence within the global drug policy landscape. The historically domi...
African policy makers find themselves confronted by a phenomenon of rising substance use particularl...
This paper examines the debate surrounding the trend of global movements away from prohibition and t...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. Background: The strong symbolic value of illicit drug use makes it a contested ...
This report argues that this rationale for continuing with an enforcement-led approach to drugs is p...
This paper examines the debate surrounding the trend of global movements away from prohibition and t...
In this paper I describe the nature of my interest in drug policy; discuss questions about whether a...
From over-the-counter cough syrups and prescribed painkillers to street economies of heroin and fent...
From the closure of London’s nightclub Fabric to Duterte’s drug war, law enforcement has become the ...
In the past ten years, the use of low-grade heroin (known as whoonga or nyaope) by people from margi...
There is an ongoing national debate around cannabis policy. This brief position statement by the Exe...