Few would dispute that illicit drug use and abuse is one of the most
prominent and perplexing issues facing our society. For nearly a
century, the United States has been an active proponent of the punitive
prohibition of illicit drugs. Unfortunately, the "War on Drugs" has been
largely unsuccessful; prosecution of illegal drug consumption has
filled our prisons without significantly reducing crime, decreasing
homelessness, preventing overdose deaths, diminishing the spread of HIV,
or undermining the illegal drug market. Many would now argue that the
vision of a "drug-free" America is unrealistic. Other countries are
turning to "harm reduction" policies to reduce the societal damage that
illegal drug use causes. With cautious optimism, the Baker Institute
Drug Policy Program pursues research and open debate on local and
national drug policies in hopes of developing pragmatic policies based
on common sense, driven by human rights interests, and focused on
reducing the death, disease, crime and suffering associated with drug
use.
In recent research, William Martin, the institute's Harry
and Hazel Chavanne Senior Fellow in Religion and Public Policy, has
written, lectured, lobbied and testified before the Texas Legislature
supporting needle exchange programs, widely used in many countries but
scarce and often opposed in the United States, as a proven method of
reducing the spread of blood-borne diseases such as HIV/AIDS and
Hepatitis C without increasing drug use. He has also written and
lectured in support of regulation and taxation of marijuana as a means
to 1) reduce profits criminal cartels reap from illegal sales and
associated violence; 2) enhance state and federal budgets by lowering
costs of law enforcement and corrections, and raising income from
taxation of the widely used drug; and 3) halt damage caused by applying
criminal sanctions to people who use a drug less harmful than either
tobacco or alcohol.
Other current research focuses on the
injustices and enormous individual and social costs associated with a
punishment-oriented approach to drug use and abuse, perhaps seen most
clearly in mandatory minimum sentences that can consign drug users with
no record of violent or other serious crime to decades in prison, at
great financial cost and with little evidence of efficacious
consequences.