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Illicit drug use in Australia

Illicit drug use in Australia is the recreational use of prohibited drugs in Australia. Illicit drugs include illegal drugs (such as cannabis, opiates, and certain types of stimulants), pharmaceutical drugs (such as pain-killers and tranquillisers) when used for non-medical purposes, and other substances used inappropriately (such as inhalants).[1] According to government and community organisations, the use and abuse, and the illegality, of illicit drugs is a social, health and legal issue that creates an annual illegal market estimated to be worth A$6.7 billion.[2]

In Australia, many drugs are regulated by the federal Standard for the Uniform Scheduling of Medicines and Poisons, as well as various state and territory laws. This includes many prescription-only drugs which are considered "illicit drugs" if the holder does not have a prescription or other authority to possess them. However alcoholic beverages, tobacco and caffeine are not covered by this law.

Drug use in Australia

History

Prior to Australian Federation, there was little policy response to the use of illicit substances.[3] Opium was mostly regulated via colonial trade laws, with most government interventions taking the form of warning labels, designed to prevent death through overdose. According to the Victorian Premier's Drug Advisory Council in 1899, there were three main "classes" of opium users. The first class of opium users were middle-class, middle-aged women who took the drug for menstrual pain or to alleviate the symptoms of depression. The second class of opium users included doctors, nurses and other health professionals, who used the drug as a strategy for coping with the stress of their work. The third class were Chinese immigrants, amongst whom the drug was primarily used as a recreational substance.[3]

Many of the initial attempts to control opium were motivated by racism, with Anglo-Celtic Australians citing opium use by Chinese Australians as a danger to health and morality.[3] As Australia approached Federation, an increasing number of bills were passed in state parliaments to restrict the use of opium. By 1905, there were many laws in place which prohibited the import and use of smoking grade opium; however, by the 1930s, Australia had the developed world's highest per capita rate of heroin consumption.[4]

With the introduction of laws and policies which prohibited the import and use of opium, taxation income the government had previously been earning from opium imports was redundant. A customs report in 1908 noted that "it is very doubtful if such a prohibition has lessened to any great extent the amount bought into Australia."[3]

Desmond Manderson, an expert on the history of Australian drug policy, has asserted that from this time forward, Australia's drug policies have been more dictated by international relations and a political need for moral panic than any concern for health and welfare (Manderson, 1993).[3]

Following World War I, the Hague Conference and The Treaty of Versailles began to set international agreements on drug laws (Berridge, 1999). Britain signed the treaties on behalf of Australia, and from this point on, Australia's State and Territory governments have created their own laws and policies relating to illicit drug use.[3] In the 1920s and 1930s, there was an increasingly internationalist approach to drug policy, overseen by the League of Nations, with Australia enacting a series of increasingly strict drug laws (Mandelson, 1987),[3] despite the low incidence of illicit drug use in Australia during this period. Although Australia was initially influenced by the strict illicit drug controls and penalties promoted by the League of Nations, and subsequently the United Nations; following the end of the World War 2, Australia's illicit drug policies became increasingly influenced by the United States, due to the United States' increasingly pro-active participation in United Nations policy making and large financial contribution to United Nations budgets. Hence, the strong British influence on Australia's drug policies waned, and Australia's illicit drug policies shifted from a health and social focus to an increased focus on law enforcement and criminal justice.[5]

Illicit drug use in Australia was popularised in Australia in the 1960s. The shifting of social and cultural norms in the 1960s counterculture, which explicitly involved a sense of revolution, created a youth culture which was enthusiastic about exploring altered states of consciousness and were keen to experiment with drugs. In 1960's Sydney, the most high-profile use of illicit drugs was focused around the Kings Cross area, whose reputation as a "red light district" attracted members of various international armed forces on leave from the Indochina Wars.

American troops stationed in major Australian cities such as Sydney provided access to drugs like heroin.[3][6] Heroin became immensely popular during the Vietnam War-era, and was smuggled into the country from South East Asia through crime syndicates in collaboration with members of the Nugan Hand Bank and the C.I.A.[7] Subsequently, drug use increased in the 1960s and 1970s, as did laws prohibiting illicit drug use and police powers. Since this period, Kings Cross has retained its reputation for vice and has remained a popular destination for tourists. Drug literature, later defined as a part of the grunge lit canon, shone a light on drug taking in Australian's urban areas: Monkey Grip (1977) by Helen Garner charts the fraught relationship between a single-mother in her thirties, and a twenty-something heroin addict living in Fitzroy, while Candy: A Novel of Love and Addiction (1998) Luke Davies details a young couple addicted to heroin in 1980s Sydney.

 
The Kings Cross area of Sydney in 1950.

Prior to this time, drugs had been synonymous with Kings Cross and the neighboring suburb of Darlinghurst. In the 1920s and 1930s, local Razor Gangs achieved such a level of notoriety through their violent attempts to control the local cocaine trade,[8] that Darlinghurst became colloquially known as "Razorhurst".[9] In 1932, Phil Jeffs established one of the area's most notorious nightclubs, the Fifty-Fifty club, in which gambling, sex work, "sly-grog" (illicit alcohol) and cocaine were freely available. Jeffs avoided police attention by bribing high-profile police officers to refrain from raiding the club.[10]

Drug use increased exponentially by the mid-1980s. With the emergence of HIV/AIDS, transmission of the virus was identified as a serious public health risk for injecting drug users and media attention focusing on illicit drug use increased dramatically. A series of public health campaigns, known as the "Grim Reaper campaign" were televised in 1987, designed to increase awareness of the risk of transmission of virus;[11] however, due to the "shock tactics" used in the advertisements, the campaign was criticised as further marginalizing groups at high risk of HIV/AIDS.[12] In 1985, Australia's Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, revealed in a nationally televised interview that his daughter, Rosslyn, was a heroin user.[13] Following Hawke's admission, a new drug initiative, the National Campaign Against Drug Abuse (NCADA), was launched.[14] Roundtable discussions instigated by the National Campaign Against Drug Abuse produced a National Drug Strategy that has continued to provide a foundation for Australia's illicit drug policy approach.

Australia's first National Drug Strategy (1985), focused on demand reduction, supply reduction and harm reduction.[15] However, studies have identified that this policy, which continues today,[16] has failed as government funds are primarily focused on law enforcement, rather than prevention and treatment.[17]

The death of Sydney teenager Anna Wood from ecstasy in 1995 prompted strong media coverage and moral outrage over concerns relating to teenage drug use in Australia and attacks on rave dance parties, where Wood consumed the drug and later became ill.[18] Wood's parents later vehemently campaigned the "Just Say No" policy across the country to prevent the tragedy from re-occurring.[19] However, despite state and federal governments investing millions of dollars[20] in anti-drug campaigns,[21] ecstasy use has increased amongst Australians, including young people.[22]

21st century

During the 1990s, Australia experienced a heroin "epidemic",[23] in which high quality, low priced heroin, imported from South East Asia, was readily available in many metropolitan, suburban and rural areas.[24] However, since 2001, Australia has been experiencing what is being referred to as a "heroin drought",[25] with high grade heroin being much more difficult to access.[26][27]

As a result of this, many other illicit drugs have risen and fallen in popularity to fill this void, with prescription temazepam, morphine, oxycodone, methamphetamine and cocaine all being used as a substitute.[28] 2008 has seen a reversal of this trend, with the arrival of Afghan heroin being seen in Sydney for the first time ever.[29] Although anecdotal evidence from illicit drug users reject the claim, some researchers assert that the potency of heroin has since been on the rise, and is nearly comparable to the purity of heroin prior to 2000.[30]

In 2001, the Sydney Medically Supervised Injecting Centre opened in Kings Cross. It was opened on the recommendation of the Wood Royal Commission. Prior to this, several venues such as strip clubs or brothels in Kings Cross rented out rooms to injecting drug users so that they could have a private and safe place to inject. This practice went on with unofficial approval by the police, as it kept injecting drug use off the streets and in the one area. This further allowed criminal activity to profit off illicit drug use, as many venue owners would sell rooms and drugs. The Wood Royal Commission identified that while there were benefits to these illegal shooting galleries, allowing police to cooperate with illegal activities could encourage corruption, it suggested an independent medical facility to continue providing safety for the users, and safety for the public by lessening the impact of drug use on the streets, such as discarded needles or drug related deaths.[31]

The Australian Crime Commission's illicit drug data report for 2011–2012 was released in western Sydney on 20 May 2013 and revealed that the seizures of illegal substances during the reporting period were the largest in a decade due to record interceptions of amphetamines, cocaine and steroids. The report also stated that average strength of crystal methamphetamine doubled in most jurisdictions within a 12-month period and the majority of laboratory closures involved small "addict-based" operations.[32]

The Melbourne inner-city suburbs of Richmond and Abbotsford are locations in which the use and dealing of heroin has been concentrated for a protracted time period. Research organisation the Burnet Institute completed the 2013 'North Richmond Public Injecting Impact Study' in collaboration with the Yarra Drug and Health Forum, City of Yarra and North Richmond Community Health Centre and recommended 24-hour access to sterile injecting equipment due to the ongoing "widespread, frequent and highly visible" nature of illicit drug use in the areas. During the period between 2010 and 2012 a four-fold increase in the levels of needles and syringes collected from disposal units and street-sweep operations was documented for the two suburbs. In the local government area the City of Yarra, of which Richmond and Abbotsford are parts, 1550 syringes were collected each month from public syringe disposal bins in 2012. Furthermore, ambulance callouts for heroin overdoses were 1.5 times higher than for other Melbourne areas in the period between 2011 and 2012 (a total of 336 overdoses), and drug-related arrests in North Richmond were also three times higher than the state average. The Burnet Institute's researchers interviewed health workers, residents and local traders, in addition to observing the drug scene in the most frequented North Richmond public injecting locations.[33]

On 28 May 2013, the Burnet Institute stated in the media that it recommends 24-hour access to sterile injecting equipment in the Melbourne suburb of Footscray after the area's drug culture continues to grow after more than ten years of intense law enforcement efforts. The institute's research concluded that public injecting behaviour is frequent in the area and inappropriately discarding injecting paraphernalia has been found in carparks, parks, footpaths and drives. Furthermore, people who inject drugs have broken open syringe disposal bins to reuse discarded injecting equipment.[34]

A study (part of the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010 published in The Lancet), led by Professor Louisa Degenhardt from the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, reported in late August 2013 that Australia has one of the world's most serious drug problems, caused by amphetamines, cocaine, cannabis and opioids. Co-author Professor Harvey Whiteford, from the University of Queensland, stated: "There is no doubt Australia has a culture, especially among our young people, which does not see the taking of illicit substances or binge drinking as particularly detrimental to the health. Our study suggests otherwise."[35]

In mid-September 2013, research by the Australian Bureau of Statistics valued the contribution of the illicit drugs market to the Australian economy at A$6 billion, while tax avoidance is responsible for an additional A$20 billion. The same research also recorded a fall of 19 per cent between 2008 and 2013 due to a reduction in the sales of heroin and cannabis.[36]

An Australian study released on 16 September 2013 showed that ambulance callouts for meth and amphetamine-related issues rose from 445 to 880 cases in Melbourne, the capital city of Victoria—this rise is attributed mainly to crystal methamphetamine, as attendance figures rose from 136 to 592 cases. The list of reasons for the callouts included anxiety, paranoia, palpitations, gastrointestinal symptoms, and self-harm.[37]

Figures obtained by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) on drug overdose were released in August 2014. The data revealed that the 1,427 overdose deaths recorded nationally in 2012 by the ABS outnumbered the road toll for the second year in a row, as well as a 65-per cent increase in accidental overdose deaths among females over the previous decade. Many of the recorded deaths were the result of prescription drug use.[38]

2012 United Nations World Drug Report

The 2012 United Nations World Drug Report published data that indicated that Australia has one of the highest global prevalence of cannabis use. The report also stated that cocaine use had increased over the four years leading up to 2012. The use of 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine (MDMA), more commonly known as "Ecstasy", declined from 3.7 per cent to 3.0 percent between 2007 and 2010; however, the highest number of manufacturing laboratory interceptions occurred in Australia during this period.[39][40]

Policy response

The Australian government enacted numerous policies in response to illicit drug use. During the 1980s, it was one of the first countries to enact the policy of "harm minimisation", which consists of three pillars: "demand reduction", "supply reduction" and "harm reduction". This policy is still in effect as of 2012 and the following outlines are contained in The National Drug Strategy: Australia's integrated framework document:

  • Supply reduction strategies to disrupt the production and supply of illicit drugs, and the control and regulation of licit substances.[41] It involves border security, Customs and prosecuting people involved in the trafficking of illicit substances.
  • Demand reduction strategies to prevent the uptake of harmful drug use, including abstinence orientated strategies and treatment to reduce drug use;[41] This involves programs promoting abstinence or treating existing users.
  • Harm reduction strategies to reduce drug-related harm to individuals and communities.[41] It is a policy that is a "safety net" to the preceding two policies. The threefold model accepts that demand prevention and supply prevention will never be completely effective, and if people are involved in risky activities, the damage they cause to themselves and society at large should be minimised. It involves programs like needle and syringe programs and safe injecting sites, which aim to prevent the spread of disease or deaths from overdoses, while providing users with support to reduce or stop using drugs.

In 2007 Bronwyn Bishop headed a federal parliamentary committee reported that the Government's harm reduction policy is not effective enough. It recommended re-evaluating harm reduction and a zero-tolerance approach for drug education in schools. The committee also wanted the law changed so children can be put into mandatory care if parents were found to be using drugs. It suggested "establish[ing] adoption as the 'default' care option for children aged 0–5 years where the child protection notification involved illicit drug use by the parent/s". The report says federal, state and territory governments should only fund treatment services that are trying to make people permanently drug-free and priority should go to those that are more successful.[42][43]

The report was criticised by a range of organisations such as Family Drug Support,[44] the Australian Democrats[45] and the Australian Drug Foundation[46] for lacking evidence, being ideologically driven and having the potential to do harm to Australia. The Labor Party authors also released a dissenting report. The report and its recommendations have been shelved since the election of the Rudd Government in 2007 (Rudd was prime minister until 2010).[47][48]

A report authored by Professor Alison Ritter, the director of the drug policy modelling program at the University of NSW (UNSW), was released in June 2013 calculated that the Australian Government continues to spend A$1.7 billion on its annual illicit drug response. Entitled "Government Drug Policy Expenditure in Australia", the report also concluded that the harm reduction arm of the government's policy, with 2.1 per cent of the drugs budget, or A$36 million, devoted to harm reduction in the 2009-10 financial year. During the same time period, A$361 million, or 21 per cent, was directed towards treatment and A$1.1 billion was expended on law enforcement. The report identifies a significant decrease in the proportion of funds allocated to harm reduction over time and Ritter expressed her concern in an interview with the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper:

It's a shift in policy that hasn't been formally acknowledged. There is absolutely no reason that investment should have decreased. We don't have good evidence that law enforcement works, and we have anecdotal evidence I suppose that it might not work as a policy. We continue to arrest people and drugs keep coming into Australia … and profits continue to be made.[49]

In 2015 the Legislative Council of Victoria instructed the Law Reform, Road and Community Safety Committee to inquire into, consider and report, on the effectiveness of laws, procedures and regulations relating to illicit and synthetic drugs and the misuse of prescription medication in minimising drug‑related health, social and economic harm; and the practice of other Australian states and territories and overseas jurisdictions and their approach to drug law reform and how other positive reforms could be adopted into Victorian law. Throughout the inquiry, the committee received 231 submissions from a diverse range of experts and stakeholders working in various areas of drug policy and law reform, in addition to individual members of the community. The Committee held nine days of public hearings and two site visits in Melbourne and Sydney from June to November 2017. In addition, the Committee travelled to Geneva, Lisbon, London, Vancouver, Denver and Sacramento in July 2017, in addition to Wellington in October 2017, to explore how different jurisdictions manage the problems of substance use and impacts on broader communities, and to meet with agencies involved in international drug policy and control. The report recommended that, the Victorian Government explore avenues to distribute naloxone more effectively, the report stated such avenues might include, needle and syringe programs and other community health services where staff are trained to educate others in administering naloxone, making naloxone available to first responders to overdose calls in areas with high concentrations of injecting heroin use, accompanied with appropriate training. The report also made a number of other recommendations including that the Victorian Government develop an emergency action plan to respond to a potential increase in deaths or overdoses as a result of high strength and purity of illicit substances, The Victorian Government commission an independent economic review into drug‑related expenditure and outcomes in Victoria, stating this should include a cost‑benefit analysis of all key initiatives and be made publicly available, The proposed Advisory Council on Drugs Policy investigate international developments in the regulated supply of cannabis for adult use, and advise the Victorian Government on policy outcomes in areas such as prevalence rates, public safety, and reducing the scale and scope of the illicit drug market and that Victoria Police commission an independent evaluation of the use of drug detection dogs at music festivals and other public spaces to determine their effectiveness in deterring the use and trafficking of illicit substances, and any unintended consequences or risk of harms resulting from this strategy.[50]

On 17 October 2018 the Western Australia Legislative Council established the Select Committee into Alternate Approaches to Reducing Illicit Drug Use and its Effects on the Community. The Committee inquired into approaches to reducing harm from illicit drug use in other jurisdictions and compared their effectiveness to the approaches currently used in Western Australia. In November 2019, the committee published a report titled Help, Not Handcuffs: Evidence-based Approaches To Reducing Harm From Illicit Drug Use. The committee made a number of recommendations including that "a health-based response to the use and possession of drugs makes provision for the cultivation of cannabis for personal use", for the introduction of pill testing at music festivals, safe consumption rooms, as well as, in the reports summary for the abolishment of criminal penalties for personal use and possession of drugs. The committee also made a number of findings including, that "the current approach to prohibiting drug use is not having the intended effect of stopping people from taking drugs", "a zero-tolerance approach to drug use is incompatible with harm reduction" and that, "drug use and possession for personal use should be treated primarily as a health issue".

The recommendations were rejected by the McGowan, Labor led state government minutes after the report was publicly released, stating, "We are not going to soften our approach to illicit drug use".[51]

In 2019 an inquest was held in relation to the deaths of six young people, aged 18 to 23, at music festivals in NSW between 2017 and 2019, hearing evidence from a number of health and law enforcement professionals amongst other experts. On the 8 November 2019 NSW deputy state coroner Harriet Grahame released findings from the inquest.[52] In her report Grahame made a number of recommendations including for the introduction of pill testing at music festivals, for the government to pay to establish a permanent drug-checking facility outside the festival context, decriminalisation of drugs and the abolishment of sniffer dogs at music festivals. Grahame stated "Drug checking is simply an evidence-based harm reduction strategy".[53] New South Wales premier, Gladys Berejiklian dismissed the recommendation to introduce pill testing at music festivals in the state, before the official release of the findings.[54]

In 2019 the Queensland government instructed the Queensland Productivity Commission to conduct an enquiry into imprisonment and recidivism in QLD, the final report was sent to the Queensland Government on 1 August 2019 and publicly released on 31 January 2020. The commission found that "After many decades of operation, illicit drugs policy has failed to curb supply or use. The policy costs around $500 million per year to administer and is a key contributor to rising imprisonment rates (32 per cent since 2012). It also results in significant unintended harms, by incentivising the introduction of more harmful drugs and supporting a large criminal market". Evidence suggests moving away from a criminal approach will reduce harm and is unlikely to increase drug use". The committee made a number of recommendations including that the Queensland government enact a staged reform to legalise cannabis, as well as for the decriminalization of other drugs.[55][56] The QPC said the system had also fuelled an illegal market, particularly for methamphetamine. Although the Palaszczuk Queensland Labor Party led state government rejected the recommendations of its own commission stating they "have no plans to alter any drug laws".[57]

In 2019 The Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP) and St Vincent Health Australia called on the NSW Government to publicly release the findings of the Special Commission of Inquiry into the Drug ‘Ice, saying there was "no excuse" for the delay.[58] The report was the culmination of months of evidence from health and judicial experts, as well as families and communities affected by  amphetamine-type substances across NSW. The report made 109 recommendations aimed to strengthen the NSW Governments response regarding amphetamine-based drugs such as crystal meth or ice. Major recommendations included more supervised drug use rooms, a prison needle and syringe exchange program, state-wide clinically supervised substance testing, including mobile pill testing at festivals, decriminalisation of drugs for personal use, a cease to the use of drug detection dogs at music festivals and to limit the use of strip searches. The report, also called for the NSW Government to adopt a comprehensive Drug and Alcohol policy, with the last drug and Alcohol policy expiring over a decade ago. The reports commissioner said the state's approach to drug use was profoundly flawed and said reform would require "political leadership and courage", "Criminalising use and possession encourages us to stigmatise people who use drugs as the authors of their own misfortune," Mr Howard said current laws "allow us tacit permission to turn a blind eye to the factors driving most problematic drug use" including "trauma, childhood abuse, domestic violence, unemployment, homelessness, dispossession, entrenched social disadvantage, mental illness, loneliness, despair and many other marginalising circumstances that attend the human condition".[59] The NSW government rejected the reports key recommendations, saying it would consider the other remaining recommendations. Director of the Drug Policy Modelling Program (DPMP) at UNSW Sydney's Social Policy Research Centre said the NSW Government has missed an opportunity to reform the state's response to drugs based on evidence.[60] The NSW Government is yet to officially respond to the inquiry as of November 2020, a statement was released from the government citing intention to respond by the end of 2020.[61]

On 7 April 2021, the Coroners Court of Victoria released its findings in relation to the drug-related deaths of five young males, aged between 17 and 32, across Melbourne between July 2016 and January 2017. Coroner Spanos recommended that the Victorian Department of Health urgently implement a public drug checking service where samples are rapidly analysed for content and purity as well as an early warning network to alert the public to contaminated drugs in the community.[62]

On 3 February 2023, it was announced that from July 2023, authorised psychiatrists in Australia will be able to legally prescribe MDMA for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression.[63]

Policing and other activities

On 19 September 2018 Attorney General of Western Australia, John Quigley instructed former Chief Justice Wayne Martin to conduct a review of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act including to "identify unintended consequences and anomalies in the operation of the Act and examination of whether the Act contains adequate safeguards to avoid undue hardship, unfairness or injustice to respondents and third parties."[64] On the 8th of may 2019 Mr Martin AC QC published a report concluding that "the Act should be repealed and re-written". In the report Mr Martin stated that, "the Act is largely unconcerned with whether confiscation is fair or just" and "has the undeniable potential to inflict injustice, and to operate arbitrarily and unfairly[65]".

In December 2020 following an investigation, the NSW Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC) reported that strip searches conducted by NSW police were routinely unlawful.[66]

In November 2021 Slater and Gordon and Redfern Legal Centre announced a potential class action against NSW police following a number of unlawful strip searches performed at music festival Splendour in the Grass.[67] In July 2022 Slater and Gordon and Redfern Legal Centre filed the class action lawsuit in the Supreme Court of New South Wales.[68]

Drug law reform

A number of Australian and international groups have promoted reform in regard to 21st-century Australian drug policy. Organisations such as Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform,[69] Responsible Choice,[70] the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation,[71] Norml Australia,[72] Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) Australia[73] and Drug Law Reform Australia[74] advocate for drug law reform without the benefit of government funding. The membership of some of these organisations is diverse and consists of the general public, social workers, lawyers and doctors, and the Global Commission on Drug Policy has been a formative influence on a number of these organisations.[citation needed]

Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform

The Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform consists of politicians from state and federal governments. Upon joining the group, all members sign a charter that states:

This Charter seeks to encourage a more rational, tolerant, non-judgmental, humanitarian and understanding approach to people who currently use illicit drugs in our community. The aims of the Australian Parliamentary Group for Drug Law Reform are to minimise the adverse health, social and economic consequences of Australia's policies and laws controlling drug use and supply.[69]

As of 1998, short-term goals of the Group include:

  • an increasing focus on the reduction of harm associated with drug use
  • abolition of criminal sanctions for the personal use of drugs
  • the adoption on a national basis of the South Australian and Australian Capital Territory expiation notice model for the reform of laws regarding the personal use of marijuana
  • the adoption of a process including consultation and prescription by medical practitioners for selected illicit drugs[69]

Long-term goals include "the reform of drug laws in planned stages with detailed evaluation of such laws at all stages and the minimisation of the harmful use of drugs".[69]

Responsible Choice

According to its website, Responsible Choice is an organisation that was initiated in response to the criminalisation of cannabis in Australia, specifically in terms of the legalisation of alcohol, another drug that the organisation describes as "our ONLY legal similarly categorised substance". The organisation explains that its mission is to "enliven the debate as to whether or not cannabis should enjoy regulation within Australian society comparable to alcohol. It is also our intention to provide recent, relevant and factual information regarding both cannabis and alcohol"[75] and Responsible Choice's "resident writer", Tim, further explains that:

As a parent I have come to realise that I no longer believe alcohol is a recreational drug I would encourage my children to use. Knowing full well that when the time comes the choice will not be mine to make, I have made it a goal of mine to investigate, research and comment on current drug policy juxtaposed with the negative effects alcohol, with a view towards providing researched based information to those who are seeking it. This has allowed me to see the place that cannabis should rightly have in our society, specifically in its capacity to reduce the harmful effects of alcohol.[75]

As of February 2013, Responsible Choice provides support to the Australian Drug Law Reform political party.[70]

Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation

The Charter of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation is "endorsed by the Australian Parliamentary Group for Drug Law Reform, seeks to encourage a more rational, tolerant and humanitarian approach to the problems created by drugs and drug use in Australia."[76] Supporters of the organisation can provide financial donations, join the organisation as a member and review the website for its information resources. The website also lists numerous Australian supporters of drug law reform:

  • Nicholas Cowdery AM QC Former NSW Director of Public Prosecutions
  • Ken Crispin QC (retired) Supreme Court Judge
  • Professor Peter Baume AC Former Senator for New South Wales
  • Geoff Gallop Former Premier of Western Australia
  • Dr. Wendell J. Rosevear OAM
  • The Hon. Amanda Ruth Fazio Member of the NSW Legislative Council
  • The Hon. Richard Stanley Leigh Jones Former Member of the NSW Legislative Council
  • Dr Mal Washer MP Federal Liberal Member for Moore
  • Kate Carnell AO Former Chief Minister of the ACT
  • Michael Moore CEO Public Health Association of Australia and Former Minister for Health and Community Care
  • Mick Palmer AO APM Former Commissioner, Australian Federal Police
  • Dr Michael Wooldridge Former Commonwealth Minister for Health
  • Professor David Penington AC Former dean of medicine and vice-chancellor at Melbourne University
  • The Hon. Cate Faehrmann Member of the NSW Legislative Council
  • The Hon. John Della Bosca Former member of the NSW Legislative Council[77]

The Hon. Stanley Lee Jones states on the website of the Foundation:

If heroin were legal today, as it was in 1953, society would not have a drug problem. I talked to a former member for Monaro who was a chemist and who dispensed heroin in the 1950s. He said he had no problems with his customers when heroin was legal. In those days 70 per cent of crime was not associated with drug prohibition: It did not exist because heroin was legal. The problems began only when heroin became illegal and a criminal fraternity developed around its sale, as occurred during the prohibition era of the 1930s when criminals made money by selling illegal alcohol. When there is a profit motive involved people will push any illegal substance. That is the key problem: If there were no profit motive there would be no incentive to push drugs on the streets of Cabramatta or anywhere else. When people finally realise that they will find a solution to the drug problem.[77]

The Foundation features numerous reports that are available for download on its website, such as the Australia21 reports "Alternatives to Prohibition" and "The Prohibition of Ilicit Drugs: Killing and Criminalising Our Children", "A Balancing Act" from the Open Society Foundation, Release's "A Quiet Revolution: Drug Decriminalisation Policies in Practice Across the Globe", and "Children of the Drug War", edited by Damon Barrett and produced by Harm Reduction International.[71]

Australian Greens

The Australian Greens support the legalisation of cannabis in Australia for all adults (aged 18 years old and above).[78][79][80] They also support treating drug use as a health issue rather than a criminal one under a harm minimisation and evidence based approach.[81]

NORML Australia

NORML Australia is based in Kotara, New South Wales,[82] produces a quarterly magazine[83] (the first edition of the NORML Australia Magazine can be viewed online[84]) and "supports the right of adults to use marijuana responsibly, whether for medical or personal purposes." The organisation "also supports the legalisation of hemp (non-psychoactive marijuana) for industrial use."[85] The organisation's website's membership list consists of 17 individuals, while the representatives of the organisation of the organisation are also listed on the website: Sean Sylvester (President), David Perkins (Vice President) and Vickie Blay (Treasury).[86]

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) Australia

As of February 2013, Paul Cubitt, a former correctional officer who was originally based at Long Bay prison in New South Wales, Australia, is the President of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) Australia. Cubitt has revealed that successive employment positions within the Australian correctional and justice system, including a period at the Alexander Maconochie correctional centre in Canberra, Australia, and a vocational course led him to an understanding of "the harm that society is doing to people who are afflicted by drug abuse".[73] As of February 2013, the website of the organisation is not functional.[87]

Greg Denham, a former police officer who served in the Australian states of Queensland and Victoria, has conducted work on behalf of LEAP Australia in Melbourne[88][89]—as the executive officer of the Yarra Drug and Health Forum, Denham has also been a vocal supporter of a proposal to establish a supervised injecting facility in the Melbourne suburb of North Richmond.[90]

Drug Law Reform Australia

The organisation, under the leadership of Greg Chipp, emerged prominently in 2013, and is a political outflow of non-political parents' and friends' groups for drug law reform. The organisation achieved the status of a political party in early 2013 by attracting in excess of 500 members, and fielded candidates in the 2013 Australian election. The goals of the Drug Law Reform Party are:

  • Stop the senseless harm caused by the failed prohibition policies, which criminalise ordinary Australians for personal drug use.
  • Advocate for conscience votes on single issues where legislation does not match the lived reality of large proportions of the Australian public.
  • To encourage political and community debate of alternatives to the current drug laws.
  • Call for a royal commission into organised crime and corruption associated with the drug trade.
  • Through parliament representation, use the senate committees, and productivity commission to examine the current drug laws.[91]

The party was officially deregistered on 31 July 2017.[92]

Reason Party

The Reason Party supports the decriminalisation of the use and possession of all drugs, harm reduction, and improved access to healthcare. The party also supports a legal and regulated market for the adult use of cannabis in Australia. The party has declared its support for "the states and territories implementing pill testing and safe injecting health services."[93]

Among the party's reasons for these policies are that they state drug criminalisation mostly impacts those who are already disadvantaged, such as Aboriginal Australians and young people. It also declares itself to be civil libertarian, advocating that adults have the right to decide what to do with their own bodies. The party states that instead of prohibition it supports harm reduction and improving education about drugs.[94]

Global Commission on Drugs

In its 2011 report, the Global Commission on Drugs found that the "global war on drugs has failed."[95] The commission, headed by several former heads of state, a former UN Secretary General and others, observed that governments around the world must begin introducing "models of legal regulation of drugs to undermine the power of organised crime and safeguard the health and security of their citizens."[95]: 2  With this in mind, the organisation, Australia 21, began researching drug policy in the Australian context.

Australia21 reports

In response to a 2011 international report by the Global Commission on Drugs, the organisation, Australia21 appointed a steering committee to evaluate Australia's current illicit drug policy.[96] The report found that Australia's current drug policy, focused as it is, on criminalisation of supply and use of drugs, has driven the production and use of drugs underground and has "fostered the development of a criminal industry that is corrupting civil society and government and killing our children."[97] They also noted that "[b]y defining the personal use and possession of certain psychoactive drugs as criminal acts, governments have also avoided any responsibility to regulate and control the quality of substances that are in widespread use."[97] The report also highlighted the fact that, just as alcohol and tobacco are regulated for quality assurance, distribution, marketing and taxation, so should currently, unregulated, illicit drugs.[97]

The independent organisation has also released the following reports: "Alternatives to Prohibition"[98] and "The Prohibition of Illicit Drugs: Killing and Criminalising Our Children".[99]

Australian illicit drug user organisations

In response to the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the mid-1980s, Australian drug users began to self-organise into the community, peer-driven state, and national drug user organisations. The aim of these organisations was to give voice to the experiences of Australian drug users and to advocate for drug-related policy reform, the provision of harm reduction prophylactics, the expansion of opioid substitution programs, to highlight the health issues affecting illicit drug users and to reduce the stigma and discrimination many illicit drug users experience. Drug user organisations have been recognised by state and federal governments as an effective strategy to educate illicit drug users in relation to techniques for avoiding blood-borne virus transmission, responding to drug overdose, safer injecting techniques, safer sex and legal issues. Australian drug user organisations use a peer education and community development approach to health promotion, with the aim of empowering illicit drug users by providing them with the skills they need to effect change in their own communities.[100]

As of November 2012, every Australian State and Territory, with the exception of Tasmania, has a drug user organisation.[101] A number of health services also employ illicit drug users to provide peer education in relation to specific issues affecting illicit drug users.[102][103] Australia's peer-based drug user organisations are members of the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League (AIVL), a national drug user organisation, which advocates for changes to current illicit drug policy at a national level.[104] As a member-based organisation, AIVL also supports State and Territory peer-based organisations to strengthen their internal governance structures, their capacity to provide services to illicit drug users and assists member-based organisations to develop advocacy strategies for engaging in localised drug-related policy issues.[105]

AIVL is a member of the International Network of People who Use Drugs (INPUD), an international network of drug user organisations and drug user activists, that advocate for the health and human rights of illicit drug users.[106] INPUD facilitates representation by illicit drug users to lobby international policy-making bodies such as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the World Health Organization, UNAIDS,[107] Harm Reduction International,[108] the Commission on Narcotic Drugs[109] and the International AIDS Society.[110]

Statistics

Imprisonment

In 2017, 6155 people were in prison with their most serious offence being an illicit drug crime. This was 15% of all prisoners in Australia.[111]

From 2013 to 2017, the number of people imprisoned for illicit drug crimes increased faster than people imprisoned for any other type of crime.[111]

In 1990, 1347 people were in prison with the most serious offence being an illicit drug offence. This was 10% of all prisoners in Australia.[112]

Arrests

Between 2015 and 2016, in Australia there were a total of 154,538 recorded arrests relating to illicit drugs.[113]

Total Illicit drug arrests[113]
State Male Female Unknown Total
NSW 26,100 6,112 11 32,223
Victoria 21,558 5,791 22 27,371
Queensland 10,708 12,041 0 22,749
South Australia 14,320 3,927 6 18,253
Western Australia 18,807 6,494 75 25,386
Tasmania 1,982 479 0 2,461
Northern Territory 1,814 639 0 2,453
ACT 546 96 0 642
Total 118,835 35,579 124 154,538

Visa cancellations

Between 2020 and 2021 drug offences were the leading cause for visa cancellations under section 501 of the Migration Act 1958 [114]

See also

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illicit, drug, australia, recreational, prohibited, drugs, australia, illicit, drugs, include, illegal, drugs, such, cannabis, opiates, certain, types, stimulants, pharmaceutical, drugs, such, pain, killers, tranquillisers, when, used, medical, purposes, other. Illicit drug use in Australia is the recreational use of prohibited drugs in Australia Illicit drugs include illegal drugs such as cannabis opiates and certain types of stimulants pharmaceutical drugs such as pain killers and tranquillisers when used for non medical purposes and other substances used inappropriately such as inhalants 1 According to government and community organisations the use and abuse and the illegality of illicit drugs is a social health and legal issue that creates an annual illegal market estimated to be worth A 6 7 billion 2 In Australia many drugs are regulated by the federal Standard for the Uniform Scheduling of Medicines and Poisons as well as various state and territory laws This includes many prescription only drugs which are considered illicit drugs if the holder does not have a prescription or other authority to possess them However alcoholic beverages tobacco and caffeine are not covered by this law Contents 1 Drug use in Australia 1 1 History 1 2 21st century 1 3 2012 United Nations World Drug Report 1 4 Policy response 1 5 Policing and other activities 2 Drug law reform 2 1 Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform 2 2 Responsible Choice 2 3 Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation 2 4 Australian Greens 2 5 NORML Australia 2 6 Law Enforcement Against Prohibition LEAP Australia 2 7 Drug Law Reform Australia 2 8 Reason Party 2 9 Global Commission on Drugs 2 10 Australia21 reports 3 Australian illicit drug user organisations 4 Statistics 4 1 Imprisonment 4 2 Arrests 4 3 Visa cancellations 5 See also 6 ReferencesDrug use in Australia EditHistory Edit Prior to Australian Federation there was little policy response to the use of illicit substances 3 Opium was mostly regulated via colonial trade laws with most government interventions taking the form of warning labels designed to prevent death through overdose According to the Victorian Premier s Drug Advisory Council in 1899 there were three main classes of opium users The first class of opium users were middle class middle aged women who took the drug for menstrual pain or to alleviate the symptoms of depression The second class of opium users included doctors nurses and other health professionals who used the drug as a strategy for coping with the stress of their work The third class were Chinese immigrants amongst whom the drug was primarily used as a recreational substance 3 Many of the initial attempts to control opium were motivated by racism with Anglo Celtic Australians citing opium use by Chinese Australians as a danger to health and morality 3 As Australia approached Federation an increasing number of bills were passed in state parliaments to restrict the use of opium By 1905 there were many laws in place which prohibited the import and use of smoking grade opium however by the 1930s Australia had the developed world s highest per capita rate of heroin consumption 4 With the introduction of laws and policies which prohibited the import and use of opium taxation income the government had previously been earning from opium imports was redundant A customs report in 1908 noted that it is very doubtful if such a prohibition has lessened to any great extent the amount bought into Australia 3 Desmond Manderson an expert on the history of Australian drug policy has asserted that from this time forward Australia s drug policies have been more dictated by international relations and a political need for moral panic than any concern for health and welfare Manderson 1993 3 Following World War I the Hague Conference and The Treaty of Versailles began to set international agreements on drug laws Berridge 1999 Britain signed the treaties on behalf of Australia and from this point on Australia s State and Territory governments have created their own laws and policies relating to illicit drug use 3 In the 1920s and 1930s there was an increasingly internationalist approach to drug policy overseen by the League of Nations with Australia enacting a series of increasingly strict drug laws Mandelson 1987 3 despite the low incidence of illicit drug use in Australia during this period Although Australia was initially influenced by the strict illicit drug controls and penalties promoted by the League of Nations and subsequently the United Nations following the end of the World War 2 Australia s illicit drug policies became increasingly influenced by the United States due to the United States increasingly pro active participation in United Nations policy making and large financial contribution to United Nations budgets Hence the strong British influence on Australia s drug policies waned and Australia s illicit drug policies shifted from a health and social focus to an increased focus on law enforcement and criminal justice 5 Illicit drug use in Australia was popularised in Australia in the 1960s The shifting of social and cultural norms in the 1960s counterculture which explicitly involved a sense of revolution created a youth culture which was enthusiastic about exploring altered states of consciousness and were keen to experiment with drugs In 1960 s Sydney the most high profile use of illicit drugs was focused around the Kings Cross area whose reputation as a red light district attracted members of various international armed forces on leave from the Indochina Wars American troops stationed in major Australian cities such as Sydney provided access to drugs like heroin 3 6 Heroin became immensely popular during the Vietnam War era and was smuggled into the country from South East Asia through crime syndicates in collaboration with members of the Nugan Hand Bank and the C I A 7 Subsequently drug use increased in the 1960s and 1970s as did laws prohibiting illicit drug use and police powers Since this period Kings Cross has retained its reputation for vice and has remained a popular destination for tourists Drug literature later defined as a part of the grunge lit canon shone a light on drug taking in Australian s urban areas Monkey Grip 1977 by Helen Garner charts the fraught relationship between a single mother in her thirties and a twenty something heroin addict living in Fitzroy while Candy A Novel of Love and Addiction 1998 Luke Davies details a young couple addicted to heroin in 1980s Sydney The Kings Cross area of Sydney in 1950 Prior to this time drugs had been synonymous with Kings Cross and the neighboring suburb of Darlinghurst In the 1920s and 1930s local Razor Gangs achieved such a level of notoriety through their violent attempts to control the local cocaine trade 8 that Darlinghurst became colloquially known as Razorhurst 9 In 1932 Phil Jeffs established one of the area s most notorious nightclubs the Fifty Fifty club in which gambling sex work sly grog illicit alcohol and cocaine were freely available Jeffs avoided police attention by bribing high profile police officers to refrain from raiding the club 10 Drug use increased exponentially by the mid 1980s With the emergence of HIV AIDS transmission of the virus was identified as a serious public health risk for injecting drug users and media attention focusing on illicit drug use increased dramatically A series of public health campaigns known as the Grim Reaper campaign were televised in 1987 designed to increase awareness of the risk of transmission of virus 11 however due to the shock tactics used in the advertisements the campaign was criticised as further marginalizing groups at high risk of HIV AIDS 12 In 1985 Australia s Prime Minister Bob Hawke revealed in a nationally televised interview that his daughter Rosslyn was a heroin user 13 Following Hawke s admission a new drug initiative the National Campaign Against Drug Abuse NCADA was launched 14 Roundtable discussions instigated by the National Campaign Against Drug Abuse produced a National Drug Strategy that has continued to provide a foundation for Australia s illicit drug policy approach Australia s first National Drug Strategy 1985 focused on demand reduction supply reduction and harm reduction 15 However studies have identified that this policy which continues today 16 has failed as government funds are primarily focused on law enforcement rather than prevention and treatment 17 The death of Sydney teenager Anna Wood from ecstasy in 1995 prompted strong media coverage and moral outrage over concerns relating to teenage drug use in Australia and attacks on rave dance parties where Wood consumed the drug and later became ill 18 Wood s parents later vehemently campaigned the Just Say No policy across the country to prevent the tragedy from re occurring 19 However despite state and federal governments investing millions of dollars 20 in anti drug campaigns 21 ecstasy use has increased amongst Australians including young people 22 21st century Edit During the 1990s Australia experienced a heroin epidemic 23 in which high quality low priced heroin imported from South East Asia was readily available in many metropolitan suburban and rural areas 24 However since 2001 Australia has been experiencing what is being referred to as a heroin drought 25 with high grade heroin being much more difficult to access 26 27 As a result of this many other illicit drugs have risen and fallen in popularity to fill this void with prescription temazepam morphine oxycodone methamphetamine and cocaine all being used as a substitute 28 2008 has seen a reversal of this trend with the arrival of Afghan heroin being seen in Sydney for the first time ever 29 Although anecdotal evidence from illicit drug users reject the claim some researchers assert that the potency of heroin has since been on the rise and is nearly comparable to the purity of heroin prior to 2000 30 In 2001 the Sydney Medically Supervised Injecting Centre opened in Kings Cross It was opened on the recommendation of the Wood Royal Commission Prior to this several venues such as strip clubs or brothels in Kings Cross rented out rooms to injecting drug users so that they could have a private and safe place to inject This practice went on with unofficial approval by the police as it kept injecting drug use off the streets and in the one area This further allowed criminal activity to profit off illicit drug use as many venue owners would sell rooms and drugs The Wood Royal Commission identified that while there were benefits to these illegal shooting galleries allowing police to cooperate with illegal activities could encourage corruption it suggested an independent medical facility to continue providing safety for the users and safety for the public by lessening the impact of drug use on the streets such as discarded needles or drug related deaths 31 The Australian Crime Commission s illicit drug data report for 2011 2012 was released in western Sydney on 20 May 2013 and revealed that the seizures of illegal substances during the reporting period were the largest in a decade due to record interceptions of amphetamines cocaine and steroids The report also stated that average strength of crystal methamphetamine doubled in most jurisdictions within a 12 month period and the majority of laboratory closures involved small addict based operations 32 The Melbourne inner city suburbs of Richmond and Abbotsford are locations in which the use and dealing of heroin has been concentrated for a protracted time period Research organisation the Burnet Institute completed the 2013 North Richmond Public Injecting Impact Study in collaboration with the Yarra Drug and Health Forum City of Yarra and North Richmond Community Health Centre and recommended 24 hour access to sterile injecting equipment due to the ongoing widespread frequent and highly visible nature of illicit drug use in the areas During the period between 2010 and 2012 a four fold increase in the levels of needles and syringes collected from disposal units and street sweep operations was documented for the two suburbs In the local government area the City of Yarra of which Richmond and Abbotsford are parts 1550 syringes were collected each month from public syringe disposal bins in 2012 Furthermore ambulance callouts for heroin overdoses were 1 5 times higher than for other Melbourne areas in the period between 2011 and 2012 a total of 336 overdoses and drug related arrests in North Richmond were also three times higher than the state average The Burnet Institute s researchers interviewed health workers residents and local traders in addition to observing the drug scene in the most frequented North Richmond public injecting locations 33 On 28 May 2013 the Burnet Institute stated in the media that it recommends 24 hour access to sterile injecting equipment in the Melbourne suburb of Footscray after the area s drug culture continues to grow after more than ten years of intense law enforcement efforts The institute s research concluded that public injecting behaviour is frequent in the area and inappropriately discarding injecting paraphernalia has been found in carparks parks footpaths and drives Furthermore people who inject drugs have broken open syringe disposal bins to reuse discarded injecting equipment 34 A study part of the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010 published in The Lancet led by Professor Louisa Degenhardt from the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre reported in late August 2013 that Australia has one of the world s most serious drug problems caused by amphetamines cocaine cannabis and opioids Co author Professor Harvey Whiteford from the University of Queensland stated There is no doubt Australia has a culture especially among our young people which does not see the taking of illicit substances or binge drinking as particularly detrimental to the health Our study suggests otherwise 35 In mid September 2013 research by the Australian Bureau of Statistics valued the contribution of the illicit drugs market to the Australian economy at A 6 billion while tax avoidance is responsible for an additional A 20 billion The same research also recorded a fall of 19 per cent between 2008 and 2013 due to a reduction in the sales of heroin and cannabis 36 An Australian study released on 16 September 2013 showed that ambulance callouts for meth and amphetamine related issues rose from 445 to 880 cases in Melbourne the capital city of Victoria this rise is attributed mainly to crystal methamphetamine as attendance figures rose from 136 to 592 cases The list of reasons for the callouts included anxiety paranoia palpitations gastrointestinal symptoms and self harm 37 Figures obtained by the Australian Bureau of Statistics ABS on drug overdose were released in August 2014 The data revealed that the 1 427 overdose deaths recorded nationally in 2012 by the ABS outnumbered the road toll for the second year in a row as well as a 65 per cent increase in accidental overdose deaths among females over the previous decade Many of the recorded deaths were the result of prescription drug use 38 2012 United Nations World Drug Report Edit The 2012 United Nations World Drug Report published data that indicated that Australia has one of the highest global prevalence of cannabis use The report also stated that cocaine use had increased over the four years leading up to 2012 The use of 3 4 methylenedioxy N methylamphetamine MDMA more commonly known as Ecstasy declined from 3 7 per cent to 3 0 percent between 2007 and 2010 however the highest number of manufacturing laboratory interceptions occurred in Australia during this period 39 40 Policy response Edit The Australian government enacted numerous policies in response to illicit drug use During the 1980s it was one of the first countries to enact the policy of harm minimisation which consists of three pillars demand reduction supply reduction and harm reduction This policy is still in effect as of 2012 and the following outlines are contained in The National Drug Strategy Australia s integrated framework document Supply reduction strategies to disrupt the production and supply of illicit drugs and the control and regulation of licit substances 41 It involves border security Customs and prosecuting people involved in the trafficking of illicit substances Demand reduction strategies to prevent the uptake of harmful drug use including abstinence orientated strategies and treatment to reduce drug use 41 This involves programs promoting abstinence or treating existing users Harm reduction strategies to reduce drug related harm to individuals and communities 41 It is a policy that is a safety net to the preceding two policies The threefold model accepts that demand prevention and supply prevention will never be completely effective and if people are involved in risky activities the damage they cause to themselves and society at large should be minimised It involves programs like needle and syringe programs and safe injecting sites which aim to prevent the spread of disease or deaths from overdoses while providing users with support to reduce or stop using drugs In 2007 Bronwyn Bishop headed a federal parliamentary committee reported that the Government s harm reduction policy is not effective enough It recommended re evaluating harm reduction and a zero tolerance approach for drug education in schools The committee also wanted the law changed so children can be put into mandatory care if parents were found to be using drugs It suggested establish ing adoption as the default care option for children aged 0 5 years where the child protection notification involved illicit drug use by the parent s The report says federal state and territory governments should only fund treatment services that are trying to make people permanently drug free and priority should go to those that are more successful 42 43 The report was criticised by a range of organisations such as Family Drug Support 44 the Australian Democrats 45 and the Australian Drug Foundation 46 for lacking evidence being ideologically driven and having the potential to do harm to Australia The Labor Party authors also released a dissenting report The report and its recommendations have been shelved since the election of the Rudd Government in 2007 Rudd was prime minister until 2010 47 48 A report authored by Professor Alison Ritter the director of the drug policy modelling program at the University of NSW UNSW was released in June 2013 calculated that the Australian Government continues to spend A 1 7 billion on its annual illicit drug response Entitled Government Drug Policy Expenditure in Australia the report also concluded that the harm reduction arm of the government s policy with 2 1 per cent of the drugs budget or A 36 million devoted to harm reduction in the 2009 10 financial year During the same time period A 361 million or 21 per cent was directed towards treatment and A 1 1 billion was expended on law enforcement The report identifies a significant decrease in the proportion of funds allocated to harm reduction over time and Ritter expressed her concern in an interview with the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper It s a shift in policy that hasn t been formally acknowledged There is absolutely no reason that investment should have decreased We don t have good evidence that law enforcement works and we have anecdotal evidence I suppose that it might not work as a policy We continue to arrest people and drugs keep coming into Australia and profits continue to be made 49 In 2015 the Legislative Council of Victoria instructed the Law Reform Road and Community Safety Committee to inquire into consider and report on the effectiveness of laws procedures and regulations relating to illicit and synthetic drugs and the misuse of prescription medication in minimising drug related health social and economic harm and the practice of other Australian states and territories and overseas jurisdictions and their approach to drug law reform and how other positive reforms could be adopted into Victorian law Throughout the inquiry the committee received 231 submissions from a diverse range of experts and stakeholders working in various areas of drug policy and law reform in addition to individual members of the community The Committee held nine days of public hearings and two site visits in Melbourne and Sydney from June to November 2017 In addition the Committee travelled to Geneva Lisbon London Vancouver Denver and Sacramento in July 2017 in addition to Wellington in October 2017 to explore how different jurisdictions manage the problems of substance use and impacts on broader communities and to meet with agencies involved in international drug policy and control The report recommended that the Victorian Government explore avenues to distribute naloxone more effectively the report stated such avenues might include needle and syringe programs and other community health services where staff are trained to educate others in administering naloxone making naloxone available to first responders to overdose calls in areas with high concentrations of injecting heroin use accompanied with appropriate training The report also made a number of other recommendations including that the Victorian Government develop an emergency action plan to respond to a potential increase in deaths or overdoses as a result of high strength and purity of illicit substances The Victorian Government commission an independent economic review into drug related expenditure and outcomes in Victoria stating this should include a cost benefit analysis of all key initiatives and be made publicly available The proposed Advisory Council on Drugs Policy investigate international developments in the regulated supply of cannabis for adult use and advise the Victorian Government on policy outcomes in areas such as prevalence rates public safety and reducing the scale and scope of the illicit drug market and that Victoria Police commission an independent evaluation of the use of drug detection dogs at music festivals and other public spaces to determine their effectiveness in deterring the use and trafficking of illicit substances and any unintended consequences or risk of harms resulting from this strategy 50 On 17 October 2018 the Western Australia Legislative Council established the Select Committee into Alternate Approaches to Reducing Illicit Drug Use and its Effects on the Community The Committee inquired into approaches to reducing harm from illicit drug use in other jurisdictions and compared their effectiveness to the approaches currently used in Western Australia In November 2019 the committee published a report titled Help Not Handcuffs Evidence based Approaches To Reducing Harm From Illicit Drug Use The committee made a number of recommendations including that a health based response to the use and possession of drugs makes provision for the cultivation of cannabis for personal use for the introduction of pill testing at music festivals safe consumption rooms as well as in the reports summary for the abolishment of criminal penalties for personal use and possession of drugs The committee also made a number of findings including that the current approach to prohibiting drug use is not having the intended effect of stopping people from taking drugs a zero tolerance approach to drug use is incompatible with harm reduction and that drug use and possession for personal use should be treated primarily as a health issue The recommendations were rejected by the McGowan Labor led state government minutes after the report was publicly released stating We are not going to soften our approach to illicit drug use 51 In 2019 an inquest was held in relation to the deaths of six young people aged 18 to 23 at music festivals in NSW between 2017 and 2019 hearing evidence from a number of health and law enforcement professionals amongst other experts On the 8 November 2019 NSW deputy state coroner Harriet Grahame released findings from the inquest 52 In her report Grahame made a number of recommendations including for the introduction of pill testing at music festivals for the government to pay to establish a permanent drug checking facility outside the festival context decriminalisation of drugs and the abolishment of sniffer dogs at music festivals Grahame stated Drug checking is simply an evidence based harm reduction strategy 53 New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklian dismissed the recommendation to introduce pill testing at music festivals in the state before the official release of the findings 54 In 2019 the Queensland government instructed the Queensland Productivity Commission to conduct an enquiry into imprisonment and recidivism in QLD the final report was sent to the Queensland Government on 1 August 2019 and publicly released on 31 January 2020 The commission found that After many decades of operation illicit drugs policy has failed to curb supply or use The policy costs around 500 million per year to administer and is a key contributor to rising imprisonment rates 32 per cent since 2012 It also results in significant unintended harms by incentivising the introduction of more harmful drugs and supporting a large criminal market Evidence suggests moving away from a criminal approach will reduce harm and is unlikely to increase drug use The committee made a number of recommendations including that the Queensland government enact a staged reform to legalise cannabis as well as for the decriminalization of other drugs 55 56 The QPC said the system had also fuelled an illegal market particularly for methamphetamine Although the Palaszczuk Queensland Labor Party led state government rejected the recommendations of its own commission stating they have no plans to alter any drug laws 57 In 2019 The Royal Australasian College of Physicians RACP and St Vincent Health Australia called on the NSW Government to publicly release the findings of the Special Commission of Inquiry into the Drug Ice saying there was no excuse for the delay 58 The report was the culmination of months of evidence from health and judicial experts as well as families and communities affected by amphetamine type substances across NSW The report made 109 recommendations aimed to strengthen the NSW Governments response regarding amphetamine based drugs such as crystal meth or ice Major recommendations included more supervised drug use rooms a prison needle and syringe exchange program state wide clinically supervised substance testing including mobile pill testing at festivals decriminalisation of drugs for personal use a cease to the use of drug detection dogs at music festivals and to limit the use of strip searches The report also called for the NSW Government to adopt a comprehensive Drug and Alcohol policy with the last drug and Alcohol policy expiring over a decade ago The reports commissioner said the state s approach to drug use was profoundly flawed and said reform would require political leadership and courage Criminalising use and possession encourages us to stigmatise people who use drugs as the authors of their own misfortune Mr Howard said current laws allow us tacit permission to turn a blind eye to the factors driving most problematic drug use including trauma childhood abuse domestic violence unemployment homelessness dispossession entrenched social disadvantage mental illness loneliness despair and many other marginalising circumstances that attend the human condition 59 The NSW government rejected the reports key recommendations saying it would consider the other remaining recommendations Director of the Drug Policy Modelling Program DPMP at UNSW Sydney s Social Policy Research Centre said the NSW Government has missed an opportunity to reform the state s response to drugs based on evidence 60 The NSW Government is yet to officially respond to the inquiry as of November 2020 a statement was released from the government citing intention to respond by the end of 2020 61 On 7 April 2021 the Coroners Court of Victoria released its findings in relation to the drug related deaths of five young males aged between 17 and 32 across Melbourne between July 2016 and January 2017 Coroner Spanos recommended that the Victorian Department of Health urgently implement a public drug checking service where samples are rapidly analysed for content and purity as well as an early warning network to alert the public to contaminated drugs in the community 62 On 3 February 2023 it was announced that from July 2023 authorised psychiatrists in Australia will be able to legally prescribe MDMA for post traumatic stress disorder PTSD and psilocybin for treatment resistant depression 63 Policing and other activities Edit On 19 September 2018 Attorney General of Western Australia John Quigley instructed former Chief Justice Wayne Martin to conduct a review of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act including to identify unintended consequences and anomalies in the operation of the Act and examination of whether the Act contains adequate safeguards to avoid undue hardship unfairness or injustice to respondents and third parties 64 On the 8th of may 2019 Mr Martin AC QC published a report concluding that the Act should be repealed and re written In the report Mr Martin stated that the Act is largely unconcerned with whether confiscation is fair or just and has the undeniable potential to inflict injustice and to operate arbitrarily and unfairly 65 In December 2020 following an investigation the NSW Law Enforcement Conduct Commission LECC reported that strip searches conducted by NSW police were routinely unlawful 66 In November 2021 Slater and Gordon and Redfern Legal Centre announced a potential class action against NSW police following a number of unlawful strip searches performed at music festival Splendour in the Grass 67 In July 2022 Slater and Gordon and Redfern Legal Centre filed the class action lawsuit in the Supreme Court of New South Wales 68 Drug law reform EditA number of Australian and international groups have promoted reform in regard to 21st century Australian drug policy Organisations such as Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform 69 Responsible Choice 70 the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation 71 Norml Australia 72 Law Enforcement Against Prohibition LEAP Australia 73 and Drug Law Reform Australia 74 advocate for drug law reform without the benefit of government funding The membership of some of these organisations is diverse and consists of the general public social workers lawyers and doctors and the Global Commission on Drug Policy has been a formative influence on a number of these organisations citation needed Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform Edit The Australian Parliamentary Group on Drug Law Reform consists of politicians from state and federal governments Upon joining the group all members sign a charter that states This Charter seeks to encourage a more rational tolerant non judgmental humanitarian and understanding approach to people who currently use illicit drugs in our community The aims of the Australian Parliamentary Group for Drug Law Reform are to minimise the adverse health social and economic consequences of Australia s policies and laws controlling drug use and supply 69 As of 1998 short term goals of the Group include an increasing focus on the reduction of harm associated with drug use abolition of criminal sanctions for the personal use of drugs the adoption on a national basis of the South Australian and Australian Capital Territory expiation notice model for the reform of laws regarding the personal use of marijuana the adoption of a process including consultation and prescription by medical practitioners for selected illicit drugs 69 Long term goals include the reform of drug laws in planned stages with detailed evaluation of such laws at all stages and the minimisation of the harmful use of drugs 69 Responsible Choice Edit According to its website Responsible Choice is an organisation that was initiated in response to the criminalisation of cannabis in Australia specifically in terms of the legalisation of alcohol another drug that the organisation describes as our ONLY legal similarly categorised substance The organisation explains that its mission is to enliven the debate as to whether or not cannabis should enjoy regulation within Australian society comparable to alcohol It is also our intention to provide recent relevant and factual information regarding both cannabis and alcohol 75 and Responsible Choice s resident writer Tim further explains that As a parent I have come to realise that I no longer believe alcohol is a recreational drug I would encourage my children to use Knowing full well that when the time comes the choice will not be mine to make I have made it a goal of mine to investigate research and comment on current drug policy juxtaposed with the negative effects alcohol with a view towards providing researched based information to those who are seeking it This has allowed me to see the place that cannabis should rightly have in our society specifically in its capacity to reduce the harmful effects of alcohol 75 As of February 2013 Responsible Choice provides support to the Australian Drug Law Reform political party 70 Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation Edit The Charter of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation is endorsed by the Australian Parliamentary Group for Drug Law Reform seeks to encourage a more rational tolerant and humanitarian approach to the problems created by drugs and drug use in Australia 76 Supporters of the organisation can provide financial donations join the organisation as a member and review the website for its information resources The website also lists numerous Australian supporters of drug law reform Nicholas Cowdery AM QC Former NSW Director of Public Prosecutions Ken Crispin QC retired Supreme Court Judge Professor Peter Baume AC Former Senator for New South Wales Geoff Gallop Former Premier of Western Australia Dr Wendell J Rosevear OAM The Hon Amanda Ruth Fazio Member of the NSW Legislative Council The Hon Richard Stanley Leigh Jones Former Member of the NSW Legislative Council Dr Mal Washer MP Federal Liberal Member for Moore Kate Carnell AO Former Chief Minister of the ACT Michael Moore CEO Public Health Association of Australia and Former Minister for Health and Community Care Mick Palmer AO APM Former Commissioner Australian Federal Police Dr Michael Wooldridge Former Commonwealth Minister for Health Professor David Penington AC Former dean of medicine and vice chancellor at Melbourne University The Hon Cate Faehrmann Member of the NSW Legislative Council The Hon John Della Bosca Former member of the NSW Legislative Council 77 The Hon Stanley Lee Jones states on the website of the Foundation If heroin were legal today as it was in 1953 society would not have a drug problem I talked to a former member for Monaro who was a chemist and who dispensed heroin in the 1950s He said he had no problems with his customers when heroin was legal In those days 70 per cent of crime was not associated with drug prohibition It did not exist because heroin was legal The problems began only when heroin became illegal and a criminal fraternity developed around its sale as occurred during the prohibition era of the 1930s when criminals made money by selling illegal alcohol When there is a profit motive involved people will push any illegal substance That is the key problem If there were no profit motive there would be no incentive to push drugs on the streets of Cabramatta or anywhere else When people finally realise that they will find a solution to the drug problem 77 The Foundation features numerous reports that are available for download on its website such as the Australia21 reports Alternatives to Prohibition and The Prohibition of Ilicit Drugs Killing and Criminalising Our Children A Balancing Act from the Open Society Foundation Release s A Quiet Revolution Drug Decriminalisation Policies in Practice Across the Globe and Children of the Drug War edited by Damon Barrett and produced by Harm Reduction International 71 Australian Greens Edit The Australian Greens support the legalisation of cannabis in Australia for all adults aged 18 years old and above 78 79 80 They also support treating drug use as a health issue rather than a criminal one under a harm minimisation and evidence based approach 81 NORML Australia Edit NORML Australia is based in Kotara New South Wales 82 produces a quarterly magazine 83 the first edition of the NORML Australia Magazine can be viewed online 84 and supports the right of adults to use marijuana responsibly whether for medical or personal purposes The organisation also supports the legalisation of hemp non psychoactive marijuana for industrial use 85 The organisation s website s membership list consists of 17 individuals while the representatives of the organisation of the organisation are also listed on the website Sean Sylvester President David Perkins Vice President and Vickie Blay Treasury 86 Law Enforcement Against Prohibition LEAP Australia Edit As of February 2013 Paul Cubitt a former correctional officer who was originally based at Long Bay prison in New South Wales Australia is the President of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition LEAP Australia Cubitt has revealed that successive employment positions within the Australian correctional and justice system including a period at the Alexander Maconochie correctional centre in Canberra Australia and a vocational course led him to an understanding of the harm that society is doing to people who are afflicted by drug abuse 73 As of February 2013 the website of the organisation is not functional 87 Greg Denham a former police officer who served in the Australian states of Queensland and Victoria has conducted work on behalf of LEAP Australia in Melbourne 88 89 as the executive officer of the Yarra Drug and Health Forum Denham has also been a vocal supporter of a proposal to establish a supervised injecting facility in the Melbourne suburb of North Richmond 90 Drug Law Reform Australia Edit Main article Drug Law Reform Australia The organisation under the leadership of Greg Chipp emerged prominently in 2013 and is a political outflow of non political parents and friends groups for drug law reform The organisation achieved the status of a political party in early 2013 by attracting in excess of 500 members and fielded candidates in the 2013 Australian election The goals of the Drug Law Reform Party are Stop the senseless harm caused by the failed prohibition policies which criminalise ordinary Australians for personal drug use Advocate for conscience votes on single issues where legislation does not match the lived reality of large proportions of the Australian public To encourage political and community debate of alternatives to the current drug laws Call for a royal commission into organised crime and corruption associated with the drug trade Through parliament representation use the senate committees and productivity commission to examine the current drug laws 91 The party was officially deregistered on 31 July 2017 92 Reason Party Edit Main article Reason Party Australia The Reason Party supports the decriminalisation of the use and possession of all drugs harm reduction and improved access to healthcare The party also supports a legal and regulated market for the adult use of cannabis in Australia The party has declared its support for the states and territories implementing pill testing and safe injecting health services 93 Among the party s reasons for these policies are that they state drug criminalisation mostly impacts those who are already disadvantaged such as Aboriginal Australians and young people It also declares itself to be civil libertarian advocating that adults have the right to decide what to do with their own bodies The party states that instead of prohibition it supports harm reduction and improving education about drugs 94 Global Commission on Drugs Edit In its 2011 report the Global Commission on Drugs found that the global war on drugs has failed 95 The commission headed by several former heads of state a former UN Secretary General and others observed that governments around the world must begin introducing models of legal regulation of drugs to undermine the power of organised crime and safeguard the health and security of their citizens 95 2 With this in mind the organisation Australia 21 began researching drug policy in the Australian context Australia21 reports Edit In response to a 2011 international report by the Global Commission on Drugs the organisation Australia21 appointed a steering committee to evaluate Australia s current illicit drug policy 96 The report found that Australia s current drug policy focused as it is on criminalisation of supply and use of drugs has driven the production and use of drugs underground and has fostered the development of a criminal industry that is corrupting civil society and government and killing our children 97 They also noted that b y defining the personal use and possession of certain psychoactive drugs as criminal acts governments have also avoided any responsibility to regulate and control the quality of substances that are in widespread use 97 The report also highlighted the fact that just as alcohol and tobacco are regulated for quality assurance distribution marketing and taxation so should currently unregulated illicit drugs 97 The independent organisation has also released the following reports Alternatives to Prohibition 98 and The Prohibition of Illicit Drugs Killing and Criminalising Our Children 99 Australian illicit drug user organisations EditIn response to the emergence of HIV AIDS in the mid 1980s Australian drug users began to self organise into the community peer driven state and national drug user organisations The aim of these organisations was to give voice to the experiences of Australian drug users and to advocate for drug related policy reform the provision of harm reduction prophylactics the expansion of opioid substitution programs to highlight the health issues affecting illicit drug users and to reduce the stigma and discrimination many illicit drug users experience Drug user organisations have been recognised by state and federal governments as an effective strategy to educate illicit drug users in relation to techniques for avoiding blood borne virus transmission responding to drug overdose safer injecting techniques safer sex and legal issues Australian drug user organisations use a peer education and community development approach to health promotion with the aim of empowering illicit drug users by providing them with the skills they need to effect change in their own communities 100 As of November 2012 every Australian State and Territory with the exception of Tasmania has a drug user organisation 101 A number of health services also employ illicit drug users to provide peer education in relation to specific issues affecting illicit drug users 102 103 Australia s peer based drug user organisations are members of the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League AIVL a national drug user organisation which advocates for changes to current illicit drug policy at a national level 104 As a member based organisation AIVL also supports State and Territory peer based organisations to strengthen their internal governance structures their capacity to provide services to illicit drug users and assists member based organisations to develop advocacy strategies for engaging in localised drug related policy issues 105 AIVL is a member of the International Network of People who Use Drugs INPUD an international network of drug user organisations and drug user activists that advocate for the health and human rights of illicit drug users 106 INPUD facilitates representation by illicit drug users to lobby international policy making bodies such as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime the World Health Organization UNAIDS 107 Harm Reduction International 108 the Commission on Narcotic Drugs 109 and the International AIDS Society 110 Statistics EditImprisonment Edit In 2017 6155 people were in prison with their most serious offence being an illicit drug crime This was 15 of all prisoners in Australia 111 From 2013 to 2017 the number of people imprisoned for illicit drug crimes increased faster than people imprisoned for any other type of crime 111 In 1990 1347 people were in prison with the most serious offence being an illicit drug offence This was 10 of all prisoners in Australia 112 Arrests Edit Between 2015 and 2016 in Australia there were a total of 154 538 recorded arrests relating to illicit drugs 113 Total Illicit drug arrests 113 State Male Female Unknown TotalNSW 26 100 6 112 11 32 223Victoria 21 558 5 791 22 27 371Queensland 10 708 12 041 0 22 749South Australia 14 320 3 927 6 18 253Western Australia 18 807 6 494 75 25 386Tasmania 1 982 479 0 2 461Northern Territory 1 814 639 0 2 453ACT 546 96 0 642Total 118 835 35 579 124 154 538Visa cancellations Edit Between 2020 and 2021 drug offences were the leading cause for visa cancellations under section 501 of the Migration Act 1958 114 See also EditAustralian National Council on Drugs Cannabis in Australia Crime in Australia Drug courts in Australia Drug liberalization Drug prohibition law Fusion Party Legalise Cannabis Australia Methamphetamine use in Australia Network Against Prohibition Punishment in Australia Uniting Medically Supervised Injecting CentreReferences Edit Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2011 2010 National Drug Strategy Household Survey report downloadable PDF Drug statistics series Canberra AIHW ISBN 978 1 74249 188 2 PHE 145 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Collins David Lapsley Helen Marks Robert March 2007 Illicit drugs damage Australian business Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation p 4 a b c d e f g h Hamilton Margaret 2001 Australia s Drug Policy Our Own In Gerber Jurg Jensen Eric L eds Drug War American Style The Internationalization of Failed Policy and Its Alternatives essay collection Taylor amp Francis pp 97 120 ISBN 978 0 8153 3405 7 Retrieved 19 May 2008 Karen McGhee September 2011 Name your poison Ecstasy or MDMA methylenedioxymethamphetamine Cosmos Magazine Luna Media Pty Ltd 40 Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 5 November 2012 Illicit Drug Policies Using Evidence To Get Better Outcomes Policy and Programs RACP The Royal Australasian College of Physicians and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists Retrieved 7 November 2012 permanent dead link James Rowe 10 April 2012 Australia s love affair with drugs The Conversation The Conversation Media Group Retrieved 6 November 2012 CIA Involvement in Drug Smuggling Part 2 Dark Politics Dark Politics Retrieved 5 November 2012 Background and Evaluation Sydney Medically Supervised Injecting Center 2010 Sydney MSIC Retrieved 5 November 2012 Kings Cross and the Razor Gangs PDF Cross Lights South Eastern Sydney and Illawarra Area Health Service 1 June 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2013 Retrieved 7 November 2012 Larry Writer The Fifty Fifty Club Razor Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd Retrieved 5 November 2012 Duncan Macleod 6 October 2005 Grim Reaper Scared Generation of Australians Against AIDS and Gay Men Postkiwi Duncan Macleod Retrieved 7 November 2012 ADAM CRESSWELL 1 December 2007 Grim Reaper stemmed AIDS tide The Australian The Australian Retrieved 7 November 2012 BLANCHE D ALPUGET 11 July 2010 Bob Hawke at breaking point Hawke The Prime Minister The Australian Retrieved 5 November 2012 Bob Douglas David McDonald 31 January 2012 The prohibition of illicit drugs is killing and criminalising our children and we are all letting it happen PDF Report of a high level Australia21 Roundtable Australia 21 Limited Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2013 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Australian Government 2003 In evaluations of the National Drug Strategic Framework 1998 99 2003 04 National Drug Strategy 2010 2015 Australian Government 25 February 2011 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Moore T J 2005 Drug Policy Modelling Project Monograph 01 What is Australia s Drug Budget The Policy Mix of Illicit Drug Related Government Spending In Australia p i Victoria Australia Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre Inc Donaghy Bronwyn 1996 Anna s Story Sydney SydneyHarperCollins ISBN 978 0 207 19184 8 Just say no to drugs to a guide on usage to tragedy The Daily Telegraph 18 June 2008 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Ms Donna Bull 16 August 2007 Drug Campaign Supported a good model for action Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia The Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia Retrieved 6 November 2012 National Drugs Campaign Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing 29 June 2011 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Carol Nader 18 February 2004 Ecstasy use by young increasing The Age The Age Company Ltd Retrieved 6 November 2012 You don t expect to die when you take a painkiller The Punch News Limited 2012 Retrieved 6 November 2012 L Degenhardt C Day 2004 The course and consequence of the heroin shortage in New South Wales NDARC Technical Report No 204 UNSW MEDICINE National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre Retrieved 6 November 2012 Paul Dietze Peter Miller Susan Clemens Sharon Matthews Stuart Gilmour Linette Collins 2004 The course and consequences of the heroin shortage in Victoria Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre Melbourne amp the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre University of NSW Commonwealth of Australia National Drug Law Enforcement Research Fund Archived from the original on 12 July 2020 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Weatherburn Don Jones Craig Freeman Karen Makkai Tony October 2001 The Australian Heroin Drought and its impact for drug policy Contemporary Issues in Crime and Justice 59 1 15 Donnelly Neil Weatherburn Don Chilvers Marilyn March 2004 The Impact of the Australian heroin shortage on robbery in NSW PDF Bureau brief NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research Australian Drug Trends PDF NDARC 2006 Afghan brown heroin hits Sydney streets The Sydney Morning Herald 15 March 2008 Gideon Warhaft Emma Black Natasha Sindicich 2007 2008 Heroin Is smack coming back User s News NSW Users and AIDS Association Retrieved 5 December 2012 The Joint Select Committee into Safe Injecting Rooms Report on the Establishment or Trial of Safe Injecting Rooms Executive Summary Parliament of New South Wales MARK SCHLIEBS 20 May 2013 Purity on the rise as ice tops the drugs wave The Australian Retrieved 20 May 2013 Lucie Van Den Berg 20 May 2013 Syringe machine push for addicts in Melbourne s heroin hot spots The Australian Retrieved 20 May 2013 Bridie Byrne 28 May 2013 Drug experts propose needle vending machines for Footscray Herald Sun Maribyrnong Leader Retrieved 29 May 2013 AAP 29 August 2013 Australia found to have one of the world s worst drug problems The Guardian Retrieved 8 September 2013 David Uren 13 September 2013 Illegal drugs industry adds 6bn to economy The Australian Retrieved 13 September 2013 Cherie Heilbronn 16 September 2013 Crystal meth harms on the rise in Australia The Conversation Australia Retrieved 16 September 2013 PETER MICKELBUROUGH 12 August 2014 More women dying from accidental drug overdoses than in road toll Australian Bureau of Statistics figures for Penington Institute show Herald Sun Retrieved 13 August 2014 Paul Toohey 27 June 2012 Aussies the biggest recreational drug users in the world report News com au News Limited Retrieved 9 September 2012 Michael Kelley 26 June 2012 Maps Of Illegal Drug Use Around The World Business Insider Business Insider Inc Retrieved 9 September 2012 a b c Ministerial Council on Drug Strategy 2004 The National Drug Strategy Australia s integrated framework Canberra The Commonwealth of Australia Govt drug policy should be zero tolerance ABC News Australia 13 September 2007 House of Representatives Standing Committee on Family and Human Services 2007 The winnable war on drugs The impact of illicit drug use on families Canberra Parliament of Australia p 750 ISBN 978 0 642 79002 6 42222551 An Opportunity Missed A Considered Response to the Winnable War on Drugs House Standing Committee on Family amp Human Services Family Drug Support 2007 Murray Sen Andrew 18 September 2007 Speech Senate Hansard Parliament of Australia event occurs at 22 20 Stronach Bill 2007 Illicit Drugs and the Family Parliamentary report lacks credibility and pragmatism Australian Drug Foundation Kevin Rudd claims victory in federal election Sydney Morning Herald 24 November 2007 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Emma Rodgers 24 June 2010 Emotional Rudd bows out ABC News ABC Retrieved 16 September 2012 Amy Corderoy 20 June 2013 Drug crime budgets leave spending on harm reduction way 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