Diverging Trends in International Drug Policy Making

November 2005

  Martin Jelsma

Diverging Trends in International Drug Policy Making
The Polarisation Between Dogmatic and Pragmatic Approaches
Presentation by Martin Jelsma
2nd European Conference on Drug Trafficking and Law Enforcement, Paris, 26 September 2002
Available in PDF format

The big trends in drug policy over the past decade reveal two opposing tendencies: one tends towards tolerance and pragmatism and has its centre of gravity in Europe, while the other under US guidance tries to reinvigorate a zero-tolerance mentality using more repressive means. The polarisation between the two trends has caused paralysis at the United Nations - the guardian of the Drug Conventions. But the tone of the global debate is changing. Rational thinking is gradually replacing the dogmas of the past. The UNGASS mid-term review on 16 and 17 April next year provides an excellent opportunity we cannot afford to lose again.

 

TNI Drugs and Democracy Programme Coordinator

Martin Jelsma is a political scientist who has specialised in Latin America and international drugs policy.  In 2005, he received the Alfred R. Lindesmith Award for Achievement in the Field of Scholarship, which stated that Jelsma "is increasingly recognized as one of, if not the, outstanding strategists in terms of how international institutions deal with drugs and drug policy."

In 1995 he initiated and has since co-oordinated TNI's Drugs & Democracy Programme which focuses on drugs and conflict studies with a focus on the Andean/Amazon region, Burma/Myanmar and Afghanistan, and on the analysis and dialogues around international drug policy making processes (with a special focus on the UN drug control system). Martin is a regular speaker at international policy conferences and advises various NGOs and government officials on developments in the drugs field. He is co-editor of the TNI Drugs & Conflict debate papers and the Drug Policy Briefing series.

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