Criminal Justice

Different Worlds: The U.S. and Latin America on Drug Reform

Published August 27, 2009 @ 07:41AM PT

With a major decision from its Supreme Court on Tuesday, Argentina seems poised to join many neighbors in Central and South America by decriminalizing the possession of small amounts of drugs. The court ruled that the arrests of five people for marijuana possession was unconstitutional, and the decision is expected to clear the way for legislation the decriminalization of personal possession- a reform supported by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (above).

Mexico last week also decriminalized the possession of small amounts of drugs, drawing praise from reformers around the world and - of course - fear and criticism from the U.S. In recent years Brazil, Ecuador, Colombia and Peru have also relaxed laws against drug possession.

These moves are more than welcome as more leaders accept that the global war on drugs has been a failure, and they will reduce prison overcrowding and hopefully expand opportunities for treatment. But they fall short in one big way: they don't address the violence and crime associated with the drug supply. I tend to agree with Jack Cole of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, who said in yesterday's Q&A that he supports " any policy about drugs that will reduce death, disease, crime or addiction," but that only legalization will truly address the crime.

"When you decriminalize," he said "You only decriminalize for the user, everyone else in that chain is still a criminal."

The outbreak of drug-related violence in recent months in Mexico won't be stopped by decriminalization. Perhaps in the long-term decriminalization will reduce drug use by focusing on treatment, but we need more immediate action to address the violence in the supply chain. I hope that Latin America's decriminalization is a step toward legalization - when these policies show that allowing personal use of drugs doesn't bring the world to an end, then we can begin the discussion of legalizing these substances and regulating the supply chain and collapsing the insane profits that draw organized crime to the drug trade in the first place.

Meanwhile, the U.S. is still content with fighting a war against the drug supply in South America while failing to address demand here at home. The U.S. ambassador to Colombia announced this week that we'll spend another half billion dollars on Plan Colombia next year. So as Latin America countries experiment with sweeping drug policy reforms, we'll keep bringing our drug war to them.

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Comments (6)

  1. Clayton Cleverly

    It's a sad day when America is being upstaged by more sound policies in such countries as Mexico and Argentina.

    I though the US was supposed to be an exporter of freedom, not a restrictor of freedom!

    Posted by Clayton Cleverly on 08/27/2009 @ 10:11AM PT

  2. Dustin Goodpaster

    America is not the land of the free. I think I will leave this country for good someday.

    Posted by Dustin Goodpaster on 08/27/2009 @ 10:28AM PT

  3. jeffrey C oldman

    we will not tolerate this.

    end the prohibition on cannabis & hemp 2010

    http://www.californiacannabisinitiative.org/

     

    Posted by jeffrey C oldman on 08/27/2009 @ 11:50AM PT

  4. Chris Rice

    Bill Clinton, George W Bush, Barack Obama . . .

    They all smoked marijuana at one point in their lives.

    None were caught and charged with a crime.

    None were branded as criminals.

    All were able to move on with their lives and achieve greatness.

    Do you think that if they had a police record of marijuana possession that any of them would have been able to be the Mayor of Wassilla?

    Making marijuana a crime destroys lives.

    Posted by Chris Rice on 08/31/2009 @ 11:12AM PT

  5. Fred Frankenberg

    Ironically, hispanic culture has been decimated by the colonization of the 'Americas'. Specifically, latinos have been ridiculed and marginalized in United States society.

    But, look who's leading the world in forward thinking, rational drug policy?

    Posted by Fred Frankenberg on 09/02/2009 @ 08:36AM PT

  6. Cherokee Fred Jesus

    If we would quit paying these countries the billions we do. To bribe them to continue our war on drugs. This would have happened years ago. Every country I know tries to help its people America is the only country where we try and enslave more to support corporate profits..

    CFJ

    Posted by Cherokee Fred Jesus on 09/08/2009 @ 08:46PM PT

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Matt Kelley

Matt has worked and volunteered in various capacities in criminal justice reform for several years. When he's not blogging, he works as the Online Communications Manager at the Innocence Project. Views expressed here are Matt's, and don't represent the positions of the Innocence Project.

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