This is a guest article by Aaron Rowe, biochemist and regular contributor to the Wired Science blog.
Researchers at the University of British Columbia have made a compelling case that drug prohibition and backwards welfare rules increase criminal activity.

A team led by Kora DeBeck and Thomas Kerr surveyed injection drug users in the Vancouver area. They asked, "If you didn't need the money to pay for your drug use, are there any sources of income in the last 30 days that you would eliminate?"
In that study, 62 percent of prostitutes and 41 percent of drug dealers said that they would cease their criminal activities if they did not need the extra income for drugs.
(Continued below the fold...)
It may seem obvious that streetwalkers don't like their jobs. However, a scientific study like this is exactly the sort of evidence that is necessary to change public policy. The researchers were able to eloquently use their findings to highlight the shortcomings of Canadian laws and social services. That critique, and the results of their survey, will appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence .
DeBeck and Kerr began with a simple argument; seizures and arrests by law enforcement agencies raise drug prices. This makes it hard for serious addicts to afford their habits without resorting to prostitution, drug dealing, panhandling, binning, and other illegal activities.
By disrupting drug markets and increasing risks involved in producing and distributing illegal substances, prohibition-based drug enforcement policies play a role in inflating drug prices, which in turn induces active IDU (injection drug users) with high intensity addictions to engage in prohibited income generating behavior to finance their drug use. While the ultimate objective of inducing high drug prices is to deter drug use, this analysis and a growing body of research indicates that the unintended consequences of these enforcement-based policies produce significant harm for drug using individuals and broader society.
Here is the biggest policy dilemma: people that receive financial assistance from the government will lose their support if they earn more than a minuscule amount from legitimate sources. This standard, intended to keep checks out of the hands of people that don't need them, may also strongly discourage the rightful recipients from pursuing normal work. Since there are no records of the illegal transactions, the drug dealers and prostitutes can have their cake and eat it too.
Furthermore, the current structure of social assistance in Canada is such that recipients will lose their income benefits if they begin to earn above $400 per month through legitimate work, leaving this population with limited income generating options beyond resorting to prohibited sources.
At the end of their report, the scholars offered several more ways to keep junkies out of trouble: increase the availability of low-end jobs, make heroin available by prescription, and offer methadone or stimulant substitutes for free.
One method of trying to reduce engagement in prohibited income generation among drug user populations with severe addictions is to expand their economic opportunities. This would involve supporting the development of legitimate means of earning income through various low threshold employment opportunities and skill building measures. A recent intervention designed to economically empower drug addicted sex trade workers to develop alternative legitimate sources of income has been shown to have a positive influence on reducing involvement in the sex trade industry. Alternatively, policy makers could intervene by providing addiction prescription and substitution therapies to individuals with markers of serious addiction to decrease their reliance on, and subsequent need to purchase, street drugs. This could be achieved in part through heroin prescription programs and by expanding substitution therapies including methadone maintenance.











Comments
A good summary of why a Dutch-style policy of Harm Reduction is always more effective than declaring "war" on drugs.
Posted by: Dirkh | September 20, 2007 10:58 AM
This makes it hard for serious addicts to afford their habits without resorting to prostitution, drug dealing, panhandling, binning, and other illegal activities.
I find it curious that prostitution, drug dealing, panhandling and binning--all victimless crimes that I don't think should be illegal--are specifically named while assault, burglary, and robbery are the unnamed "other illegal activities." This strikes me as counterintuitive. Any speculation on what such a description suggests? Perhaps an attempt to avoid demonizing drug users by avoiding mention of any violent activity?
Posted by: parse | September 20, 2007 6:19 PM
No, more like the delusional idiocy that lets some people claim that violence is the *effect* of stuff like prostitution, panhandling, etc. (Mind you, I don't count drug selling in that. Its not victimless, any more than people selling remedies containing arsenic was 'victimless'.) See, in the minds of these sorts of people, its the sex and vagrancy that come first, then rapes, murders, assault, battery, etc. It has to be. How else do you justify using the same things to "combat" it (though, mind you, raping your enemy kind of went out of style a while back.) The rest though.. are all "acceptable" ways to get rid of infidels and unbelievers. The irony being, it would probably be more acceptable to get rid of infidels in Uganda by killing them, than doing the same in the US (and no, I don't even mean for Ugandans to kill Ugandans. I mean US loonies killing Ugandans that refused to be properly loony like them.) Why else is it OK for one of our nuts to suggest assassinating "foreign" dignitaries, but not left wing politicians they dislike even more? ;)
Posted by: Kagehi | September 20, 2007 10:36 PM
Even if one makes the assumption that drug use is entirely all right (we're talking hard drugs here, which are not legal in any country in the world, Amsterdam included), I don't see how any of the conclusions here follow. Ok, so if we hand out drugs to prostitutes half of them will quit. But won't that drive up the price of prositution and thus end up recruiting more? And if drugs are legal then we won't need drug dealers anymore. So what will the other 60% who don't just do it for drug money do? Let's see, we have a bunch of violent people with guns who are accustomed to breaking the law and probably addicted to drugs too. Why do I doubt they are suddenly going to turn into saints?
There's a real easy way to stop prostitution and drug dealing. It's called having the police actually do their jobs and enforce the law.
Posted by: jvarisco | September 21, 2007 4:44 PM
The situation in Vancouver is far more complex than this somewhat naive post (and comments) account for.
You can't just take a junkie off the street, put her in a nice suit and expect her to get a job in retail or other "low end" market job. Especially if she's still shooting up, free or no. Employers and social housing agencies are unwilling to take on active drug users. If someone does want to clean up, there is a severe lack of detox beds and rehab housing to do so. Then there's retraining and help with employment search, which may be the easiest part. What seems the most difficult is looking after the mental health needs of these women, a large percentage of whom have PTSD from abuse on the street (and domestically, and in their families prior to hitting the streets), and some with severe mental illness, on top of the addiction itself. There is a shortage of services for mental health treatment too, and the number is shrinking as deinstitutionalization has a domino effect and clogs access to community services and acute care.
Then there's the issue of social supports for women who are highly stigmatized (even calling them "crack whores" in the title of this post reflects that). These are women who are routinely hunted by serial killers and sex slayers. Robert Pickton is before the courts now after years of freely murdering women and cannibalizing their bodies in supermarket ground pork packages. Viewed as disposable even by the police who don't protect them against these predators.
There are more factors, but you get the idea. Vancouver's a fucking mess.
Posted by: Sandra Kiume | September 21, 2007 8:26 PM
"we're talking hard drugs here, which are not legal in any country in the world, Amsterdam included)"
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The aim of the Dutch gov. is to identify and register all heroin addicts, so that they can be placed under a doctor's care for heroin prescriptions, and eventual withdrawal and detox, rather then sending addicts directly to jail and claiming that such warehousing is some sort of solution to the problem. Don't forget that a majority of women in prison for drug crimes have children or are pregnant. Doesn't do the kids much good to simply throw their moms in prison, does it?
This is a very idealistic and characteristically Dutch form of Harm Reduction with respect to hard drugs, but still preferable to present approaches in North America.
Posted by: Dirkh | September 22, 2007 1:45 PM
I'd be all for this legalization but we need all the crack whores we can produce.
Posted by: Bob Abu | September 29, 2007 11:44 PM