30 recommandations de la société civile pour une stratégie de l’UE sur les drogues efficace, inclusive et ancrée dans la réalité
Le CSFD appelle à une stratégie de l’UE sur les drogues centrée sur la santé, les droits humains et l’équité — en passant des déclarations politiques à l’action concrète, avec la société civile comme partenaire à part entière. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.
The Civil Society Forum on Drugs (CSFD) puts forward 30 key recommendations to ensure that the next EU Drugs Strategy is not only a political statement but a truly effective tool for action. These recommendations call for meaningful civil society involvement, a balanced approach across the three pillars of drug policy, and firm commitment to equity, inclusion, and human rights at both European and global levels.
From words to action: accountability and civil society involvement
- Meaningful and continuous civil society involvement in all phases of the Strategy, with full transparency and access to draft texts.
- Ensure people with lived and living experience are central in governance and planning.
- Sustainable civil society funding.
- Recognise the CSFD as the official EU civil society mechanism on drug policy.
- SMART indicators with clearly defined responsibilities.
A balanced strategy for real impact
Prevention, treatment and recovery
- Evidence-based prevention approaches, free from moralising narratives.
- Accessible, voluntary, comprehensive, person-centred treatment and recovery services.
- Engage actors beyond health, and build their capacity in prevention.
- Support for the EUPC and UN Standards: Train local decision-makers and support civil society’s role in implementation.
- Recognise stigma as a barrier to care.
Harm reduction at the core of drug policy
- Scale up Naloxone, DCRs, OST, drug checking, and digital tools.
- Recognise harm reduction as part of public health systems and promote continuum of services.
- Establish EU-wide standards for harm reduction, prevention, and care.
- Redirect funds from punitive approaches to evidence-based health and harm reduction services.
Refocusing the fight: tackling organised crime
- Addressing structural determinants and community resilience: Tackle the root causes of trafficking and strengthen local responses.
- Prevent discriminatory policing and uphold fundamental rights.
- Distinction between use and organised crime: Separate low-level offences from trafficking in law and policy.
- Exploration of alternative approaches: Encourage Member States to test decriminalisation of drugs use.
- Proportional sanctions and reparative justice: Replace punishment with restorative, community-based alternatives.
Equity, inclusion and coherence
- Promote gender- and age-sensitive policies: Design responses that reflect the different needs of people across gender and life stages.
- Apply a gender lens throughout the Strategy’s design and delivery.
- Embed trauma-informed care and address gender-based violence.
- Address overlapping forms of discrimination to ensure fairness.
- Adopt a child-centred approach in both policy and service provision.
- Ensure access to universal health and social care for migrants, regardless of status.
- Uphold international human rights frameworks.
Upholding EU values in global drugs policy
- Enshrine the EU’s unified voice on drug policy grounded in rights and evidence.
- Promote international conventions and UN system positions at global level.
- Champion human rights and civil society involvement in international forums.
- Align EU drug policy with the SDGs, Global AIDS Strategy, and human rights instruments.
Téléchargements
Profils associés
- International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC)