Last week I was at a
really interesting conference on psychoactivity and drug policy at Warwick
University, and was surprised and honoured to be speaking on the same
programme as the likes of Stuart
Walton and Toby Seddon.
(Unusually, I was also genuinely impressed by the publicity
they included in the conference pack – there’s
some great work in the humanities going on there.)
The theme of the conference was prohibition, particularly in
response to the Psychoactive Substances Act, which may or may not be
implemented in the next month or two. Given the media
coverage of the Act this week, I think it's timely to comment on some of the
discussions we had.
(Personally, I can’t see the government not implementing
this. Just because a
‘go live’ date hasn’t been set yet doesn’t mean the policy has been
abandoned.)
The position
of most people at the conference was opposition to ideas of
prohibition, whether from a libertarian or harm reduction perspective. For me, this debate centred on the
concept of ‘drugs’.
Fundamentally, many people’s opposition to current drug
policy is rooted in a feeling that it is unjust to have some substances legal
and others illegal, when there isn’t a great deal to choose between them in terms
of their inherent chemical or pharmacological properties. Why is alcohol legal and MDMA not? Chocolate and tobacco, but not cocaine and
cannabis? Julian Buchanan is a particularly
vocal exponent of this position, using the phrase ‘drug
apartheid’ to describe how some substances are considered consumer products
(tobacco, alcohol, etc), others medicines (methadone, morphine, sativa), and
others ‘drugs’ (heroin, cocaine, LSD).
At the conference, Toby Seddon suggested that, if we try to
understand what that last category of ‘drugs’ means, the only thing these
substances have in common is the way they are regulated. They don’t have similar origins, histories or
effects (in terms of either mind-alteration or health harm). He suggested that any attempt to prompt a
rethink of drug policy would need to question that concept of ‘drugs’, which
currently simply reinforces the ‘apartheid’, as Julian Buchanan would put it. If people keep referring to ‘drugs’, then
they’re using a category that only functions as a tool to maintain regulatory
distinctions between substances – precisely the distinctions they want to question.
An interesting presentation came from Kojo Koram, who offered a reminder of
how these distinctions can be entrenched.
The 1961 UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs uses the word ‘evil’
multiple times in its preamble (p.23 in the pdf here)
– a word that doesn’t appear in the comparable sections of conventions on
slavery, or even genocide. It is this
moral framework around ‘drug’ use that helps maintain the status of certain
forms of use (whether classified as pleasure-seeking, self-medication,
addiction or anything else) as problematic.
Stuart Walton argued that what is required is a public
challenge to these assumptions and this framework. Those in positions of influence should speak
and act in accordance with their beliefs while they are in a position to change
things; not simply afterwards, once they have safely retired or changed
jobs. And people regardless of their
power or influence should be open about their use of substances past and
present – as also encouraged by
Carl Hart – to help break that association between ‘drug’ use and ‘evil’.
My presentation was somewhat different, but focused on the
same ideas: that the concepts we use to understand policy are hugely
influential. Given the tone of the event
the night before and the conference itself was strongly against what was
defined as ‘prohibition’, and highly critical of the Psychoactive Substances
Act, I wanted to present some thinking that might be not simply critical, but
constructively critical (thinking of the
ever expanding list of rules of drug policy and Robert Maccoun’s suggestion
that “Experts like to have it both ways; we hold the government to higher
standards of proof than we apply to our own policy opinions”). I wanted to ask whether there could be a
sympathetic interpretation of the Act.
I’m not sure I entirely believe my own case, but I wanted to
offer a bit of nuance to the claims being made.
My point was relatively simple: ‘psychoactivity’ has replaced ‘harm’ as
the concept by which drug policy in the UK is justified. ‘Psychoactivity’ might not be easily
definable, but it is potentially more transparent and realistic than ‘harm’.
Before the Act, UK drug policy was structured around the concept
of ‘harm’, and this is still the organising principle for much reform activity
– the claim that we should legalise and regulate, or at least decriminalise,
‘drugs’ in order to reduce the harm to users.
The Advisory Council for the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) was there to offer
the government expert opinion about the relative harms of different substances,
which would consequently be controlled to varying degrees using the
classification system (Class A, Class B, Class C).
The
Act replaces ‘harm’ as a way of regulating substances with
‘psychoactivity’. Substances would no
longer be assessed based on their likely harm to users; they would be banned
regardless of harm if they were being bought or sold as having a psychoactive
effect. Of course this would in
principle ban alcohol, nicotine and caffeine (not to mention several other
substances) so explicit exceptions have to be made. Originally, I thought this might open out
discussion to consider why those substances are allowed and others aren’t – and
this has happened in public debate, but the government’s position hasn’t
changed.
But my argument in the conference paper was that this
position might actually be justifiable based on research from history and the
social sciences. First off, the idea of
‘harm’ from substance use is hugely complex.
It could be harm to others, through use of the substance
itself, as in passive smoking, or more indirectly through what
Liam Donaldson called ‘passive drinking’.
It could be harm to the user directly – but this could take a variety of
forms. It could be that there’s a risk
of death, or perhaps a risk of disability or sickness. And these risks could be from chronic exposure
to the substance, or from particularly severe or problematic acute exposure, or
particular patterns of use, or through combination with other risky substances
or behaviours. (Here I'm mostly
paraphrasing the discussions about alcohol harm at the
recent Alcohol Research UK conference.)
Interestingly, when we
think about drug deaths we tend to think about overdoses, while alcohol
deaths tend to be seen as due to chronic diseases, the result of heavy use
sustained over several years.
So you can see that any attempt to compare the potential
harm of different substances is fraught with difficulty. It will inevitably mean looking at a whole
range of factors, and weighting them against each other – as you can see from this
attempt by David Nutt and colleagues.
Just look at the sheer number of colours there have to be to identify
all those potential harms.
A further complication is that these harms aren’t guaranteed. As the Police are fond of pointing out in
relation to new psychoactive substances, using certain substances might be
described (if you’re prone to more than a little exaggeration) as ‘Russian
Roulette’. The key to this is the idea
of ‘risk’, the problem being that we humans aren’t terribly good at
understanding risk – as shown by the confused debate around the recent new
alcohol consumption guidelines. All this
means that it’s difficult to put a single number on the harmfulness of a
substance. And that shouldn’t be a
surprise to any historian or sociologist of drugs - though for a slightly
different reason.
Think of Howard Becker writing about
learning to get high from marijuana; Mary
Douglas talking about ‘constructive drinking’;
Norman Zinberg talking about drug, set and setting; MacAndrew
and Edgerton talking about ‘drunken comportment’; or Dwight Heath
on the anthropology of alcohol use.
All these authors note the importance of patterns of consumption and the
culture or learned behaviour around substance use in determining both practices
and harms. Of course this isn’t to deny
what might be called ‘objective’ effects or harms of substances; the point is
that how these translate into harms isn’t straightforward. When considering the likely harm of a
substance in a given society, we should be thinking about the norms around its
consumption.
This isn’t an original or blinding insight, but it is worth
remembering, as it means that policy can’t – or rather shouldn’t – really be
made on the basis of a purely scientific assessment of a substance’s properties. But what’s that got to do with
psychoactivity? Well, the way that
concept is applied in the Act is precisely how Toby Seddon or Julian Buchanan
would identify ‘drugs’ in policy discussions: it means all those things that
are illegal (or we want to be), since it explicitly excludes alcohol, nicotine
and caffeine from the category.
And maybe that’s justifiable, given the evidence around harm
and social context. There’s a legitimate
argument that given a society’s history and present circumstances, different
substances with ostensibly similar pharmacological properties shouldn’t
necessarily be regulated in the same way.
This is the thinking behind dividing societies into ‘wet’ and ‘dry’ in
relation to their attitudes to alcohol.
Some societies have developed stable ways of dealing with
well-established substances, but might not be able to have the same social
control over a new substance. I think
this is a simplification of the different ways in which we relate to alcohol,
but it's a pervasive model, and there should certainly be some acknowledgement
of the importance of social context to harm.
The point is, policy based on the sociological and historical research
on intoxicants wouldn’t necessarily apply a single standard to all relevant
substances. And a scientifically
determined concept of harm, based on the inherent properties of a substance,
wouldn’t be able to make these distinctions.
If people have quite different understandings of two very
similar substances, it’s reasonable to acknowledge those understandings as
misguided or irrational – but it would also be rational to control the
substances in different ways to take account of the different way people react
to them.
In practice, this is how the Government is using the concept
of psychoactivity: to designate substances the government thinks, rightly or
wrongly, we're not in a position to safely legalise, due to the social
context. (Or perhaps I should say,
they're not in a position to safely legalise, due to the political
context.) And based on the scientific, historical
and sociological evidence, there is a sense that psychoactive substances
have dangers (even alcohol is ‘no
ordinary commodity’), and, because of cultural factors, we can’t
treat all substances that have the same apparent level of psychoactivity or
toxicity in the same way.
This doesn’t mean that the UK government is right to ban
MDMA, LSD, nitrous oxide and a myriad of other substances. But it does make the apparent inconsistency a
coherent position. It is partly
historical accident (and as Virginia
Berridge and others would point out, a relatively recent historical
accident), but there’s no avoiding the fact that currently illegal substances
occupy a distinctly different position in our society to those longstanding
legal substances such as caffeine, alcohol and nicotine. Of course the fact that other substances have
been legal – or differently regulated – in the relatively recent past suggests
that it’s not unrealistic to imagine such a situation could be instituted
again. And that might not be a bad
thing. I’d hoped that those ‘disruptive
innovations’ of e-cigs and NPS might prompt a rethink of current drug policy,
and to a certain extent it’s disappointing they haven’t.
But to rail against the Psychoactive Substances Act as being
incoherent, inconsistent or hypocritical is not only to subscribe to a
naively rationalist view of policy, but also to neglect the hugely valuable
contribution of history and social science to the study of intoxicating
substances. We can't – and perhaps more
importantly shouldn't – rank substances according to some apparently objective,
unchanging, ahistorical notion of harm.
That's perhaps an oversimplification of what Nutt and
colleagues, and various campaigners have been trying to do, but I'd still
suggest that's the frame by which they justify their approach. And it's not only unrealistic; I'd suggest
it's actually undesirable as an ideal.
If alcohol isn't an ordinary commodity, new psychoactive substances are
even less so. So perhaps
‘psychoactivity’ in the new Act is simply a synonym for ‘drugs’ as colloquially
understood, as reflects the continuing influence of ‘drug apartheid’ – but we
should be careful of extolling the benefits of a pure, objective, rationalist
drug policy: there’s plenty of social research that suggests this wouldn’t fit
with how we actually understand and use different substances.
It may not be a perfect policy, but let’s not be too quick
to dismiss the Act as unthinking or arbitrary.
Maybe the Act, for all the critique, actually presents a more coherent
approach to drug policy than ‘harm’, which simply points to an apparent inconsistency
between legal and illegal substances.
Update 06-04-16:
You can hear me discussing some of these issues with Steve Harris of BBC Radio Solent on their 'Breakfast in Dorset' programme on the day the Act was meant to be introduced - but wasn't - here.
Update 06-04-16:
You can hear me discussing some of these issues with Steve Harris of BBC Radio Solent on their 'Breakfast in Dorset' programme on the day the Act was meant to be introduced - but wasn't - here.
We are neighbours! I am president of CLEAR Cannabis Law Reform, the UK's largest cannabis policy group. I live very close by.
ReplyDeleteThis analysis is way too over-thought for me. The goal of the state (any state) is to maximise its power. A really silly law would get ignored, which would weaken state's power. 'Social context' etc is a way to sell the law, but it's never its cause! The goal itself is always to have more power.
ReplyDeleteWhy? Internal and external competition. Replace 'state' with 'corporation' and it even sounds obvious.
David Nutt didn't realise his real goal as a science advisor was pure marketing: use science to help sell existing drug policy to the public, which is why he got sacked.
I appreciate this could be a bit over-done, but although I'd accept power (and money) are hugely important in policymaking I'd question two things about your position.
DeleteFirst, it's difficult to see 'the state' as necessarily having one single positions on issues of drugs and alcohol. The Home Office, the Treasury and the Department of Health would all have different views.
Second, politicians do take moral positions on, for example, acceptable drinking or drug legalisation. These may not often outweigh interests of power or finance, but they do change how those interests are realised.
And that morality, or default position, is down to history and social context. Why is tobacco legal and cannabis illegal? This can't simply be about power and money; wouldn't the state be more powerful if it legalised or criminalised one or the other so their status matched? What's the point of having different status? That can only be down to history, morality, and social context, surely?
I've just found this! Thanks very much for this thoughtful reflection and summary of discussions at our conference.
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