Remédier aux inégalités dans les politiques des drogues aux États-Unis : un appel à des mesures radicales fondé sur des preuves

Center on Drug Policy Evaluation

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Remédier aux inégalités dans les politiques des drogues aux États-Unis : un appel à des mesures radicales fondé sur des preuves

5 mai 2021

CDPE et Health In Justice Action Lab soulignent les mesures sanitaires et de de justice pénale que l’administration Biden devrait prioriser pour améliorer la santé et réduire les inégalités dans le pays. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

By Center on Drug Policy Evaluation

The Biden-Harris Administration has an unprecedented mandate to advance equity, which it has identified as a key priority. The advancement of equity cannot be meaningfully achieved without bold action in the domain of drug policy, as recognized by the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) by including racial equity among its priorities for the first year of the Biden-Harris Administration. For decades, current policy approaches to drug use and addiction have been amplifying inequities across racialized and economically marginalized Americans.

This is the direct result of an overreliance on the criminal justice system and supply-side enforcement (collectively described as drug prohibition) to control drug-related harms. This continues to be the status quo despite clear scientific evidence that this approach is ineffective. To address emerging and long-standing drug-related crises, the United States needs drug policies grounded in the best available scientific evidence. This is critical to addressing three interrelated issues: the opioid overdose epidemic, the disproportionate harms of the criminal justice among racialized Americans, and the potential opportunities presented by drug decriminalization and regulation.

Below, we outline five key drug policy issues that require immediate, bold, and evidence-grounded action. These are: 1. Reforming cannabis policy; 2. Removing obstacles to harm reduction for overdose and infectious disease prevention; 3. Increasing access to medication for opioid use disorder; 4. Evolving drug courts; and 5. Elevating the use of discretion in drug law enforcement.

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Profils associés

  • Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)
  • World Health Organization (WHO)

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