Drugs: Dilemmas and Choices
By a Working Party of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal College of Physicians
The 'drug problem' is getting steadily worse. Convictions for
drug offences, number of known addicts and Customs seizures have
been rising inexorably for 40 years. So has the number of young
people using illegal drugs.
Similar changes are occuring in other countries and the vast
international drug trade defies all attempts to suppress it. Yet,
remarkably, there is almost no public discussion of current control
policies.
This book, written by a multi-disciplinary group of experts,
aims to stimulate an informed debate about the possible
alternatives to these unsuccessful policies. It describes the
historical reason why alcohol and tobacco are legal while heroin
and amphetamine are not. It discusses the reasons why people use
drugs, the consequences of their doing so and the benefits and
limitation of treatment. The authors investigate the lessons to be
learnt from previous attempts to curb drug and alcohol use, how the
1.4 billion pounds that the UK Government currently devotes to drug
control might be better spent in future, and what would be likely
to happen if cannabis, or even heroin, were to be
'legalised'.
There are no easy answers. Read this book and draw your own
conclusions.
Contents
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. The main drugs
Chapter 2. Drugs and society – the historical
background
Chapter 3. The rise of drug use in the
UK
Chapter 4. The complex causes of drug
use
Chapter 5. Consequences of drug use – for the
individual and society
Chapter 6. The international drugs
trade
Chapter 7. Policies for prevention and
control
Chapter 8. Treatment of drug misuse
Chapter 9. Lessons from history
Chapter 10. The key issues
Glossary
References
Appendix I. Working Party Membership
Appendix II. Expert witnesses who gave
evidence to the Working Party
Index