Drogas ilícitas y seguridad internacional: avanzando hacia la UNGASS de 2016

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Drogas ilícitas y seguridad internacional: avanzando hacia la UNGASS de 2016

12 febrero 2014

La UNGASS de 2016 ofrece una oportunidad para que los gobiernos revisen y reformen sus políticas en el ámbito nacional y regional.

Más información, en inglés, está disponible abajo.

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In spite of a decades-long 'war on drugs', the global drug trade persists as a significant problem for international security given its scale, the number of deaths related to trafficking and consumption it creates, and the organized crime and corruption it fuels. The international drug control system has been ineffective in reducing the size of the market and in preventing the emergence of new drugs and drug routes that cause and shift instability around the world.

Current drug policies have been counter-productive, often causing more harm than the drugs themselves through capital punishment for offences, widespread incarceration, discrimination in law enforcement, violation of basic human rights in forced 'treatment' centres, and opportunity costs.

In the last three years, the drug policy debate has evolved more than in the previous three decades. There remain a number of political obstacles to making recent developments sustainable ahead of the UN General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) on drugs in 2016, but these should not be used as excuses for continuing with a failed status quo.

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