spacer
Topic quick links:
Cover page
spacer
All articles in this issue:
Drugs, alcohol and children’s lives – strategy to improve our understanding
2013 UN world drug report
Status report on alcohol and health in Europe
Physicians urge action on alcohol-related harm
LRC calls for repeal of mandatory sentencing legislation in drug cases
Penal reform high on the agenda
Report of the Inspector of Prisons
Proposed regulatory framework for buprenorphine/naloxone products in Ireland
Clinical practice guidelines for prescribing methadone in pregnancy
Research on recidivism
Suboxone feasibility study evaluated
Stakeholder views on housing-led services for homeless people
Youth homelessness in Dublin: key findings from a six-year study
Mapping the empirical research base of youth work: learning from international practice
‘A quick question’ – alcohol screening and intervention
Profile of attendees at MQI health promotion unit
From Drugnet Europe
Drug law enforcement and seizures
Recent publications
Upcoming events
Criminalising addiction: is there another way?
Breaking the taboo – debating the alternatives to criminalised addiction
Incarceration as a health strategy – imprisonment for drug offences in Ireland
Beyond criminalisation
Global trends in decriminalisation
EU action plan on drugs 2013–2016 adopted
Criminalising addiction: is there another way?
by Brigid Pike

 Some 120 participants from community drug projects, voluntary projects, youth services, drugs task forces, government departments and universities attended the conference at which four speakers made presentations – Brigid Pike, Health Research Board (HRB); Liam Herrick, Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT); Johnny Connolly, HRB; and Niamh Eastwood, Release.  Brief reports on their presentations are provided in the following pages.2

Following the presentations, participants took part in table discussions on the barriers to decriminalisation and what the international evidence tells us about the issue.  There was general, but not complete, agreement that the evidence for decriminalisation is convincing, while the issues around legalisation appear to be complicated. It was also noted that the underlying issues of poverty and social disadvantage remain crucial to addressing the impact of drugs on the lives of people, families and communities.

In closing the conference, the chairperson of CityWide, Anna Quigley, stated that the conference was a first step. See the new column in this issue of Drugnet – Towards UNGASS 2016 – for the next step taken by CityWide to promote the debate. 

 __________

1.  The conference was organised on foot of a commitment made by CityWide in 2012 to hold an open debate on decriminalisation. See Higgins M (2012) The drugs crisis: a new agenda for action. Dublin: CityWide.  www.drugsandalcohol.ie/17145   

2.  A written report on the conference and videos of the four presentations are available at www.citywide.ie/news/2013/05/27



Email Newsletter Software by Newsweaver