Litcius/Paper detail

“It should be hard to be a drug abuser” An evaluation of the criminalization of drug use in Sweden

Albin Stenström, Felipe Estrada, Henrik Tham

2024International Journal of Drug Policy13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Sweden criminalized drug use 1988. The aim was to reduce drug related harms. • The consequences of this legislation have not been evaluated. • Criminalization has not reduced problematic drug use or drug-related deaths. • Criminalization is an ineffective and harmful way of dealing with drug problems. Drug use was criminalized in Sweden in 1988 with aim of reducing the number of consumers and drug-related risks and harms. Imprisonment was introduced into the penalty scale in 1993 to improve the legislation's effectiveness. The criminalization has never been evaluated. Goal-attainment evaluation based on a range of indicators from surveys, case-finding estimates, healthcare and cause-of-death data, and crime statistics. Comparative drug policy analysis is conducted with other Nordic countries. The criminalization is not followed by a reduced or more expensive drug supply, reduced consumption levels, problematic drug use or healthcare needs, or to fewer drug-related deaths. Most of the indicators instead show the opposite. Control costs are high, and trends are no better than those of other Nordic countries, despite Sweden's more repressive drug policy. Criminalization emerges as an ineffective, expensive and harmful means of dealing with the drugs problem.

Topics & Concepts

CriminalizationDrugCriminologyDrug abuserPsychologyPsychiatrySubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesHIV, Drug Use, Sexual RiskOpioid Use Disorder Treatment