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- The Netherlands follows a policy of separating the market for illicit drugs.
Cannabis is primarily purchased through coffee shops. Coffee shops offer no or few
possibilities for purchasing illicit drugs other than cannabis. Thus The Netherlands
achieve a separation of the soft drug market from the hard drugs market - and separation
of the 'acceptable risk' drug user from the 'unacceptable risk' drug user.
Source: Abraham, Manja D., University of Amsterdam, Centre for Drug
Research, Places of Drug Purchase in The Netherlands (Amsterdam: University of
Amsterdam, September 1999), pp. 1-5.
- Comparing Important Drug and Violence Indicators
|
Social Indicator
|
Comparison Year
|
USA
|
Netherlands
|
|
Lifetime prevalence of marijuana use (ages 12+)
|
2001
|
36.9%
1
|
17.0%
2
|
|
Past month prevalence of marijuana use (ages 12+)
|
2001
|
5.4%
1
|
3.0%
2
|
|
Lifetime prevalence of heroin use (ages 12+)
|
2001
|
1.4%
1
|
0.4%
2
|
|
Incarceration Rate per 100,000 population
|
2002
|
701
3
|
100
4
|
|
Per capita spending on criminal justice system (in Euros)
|
1998
|
€379
5
|
€223
5
|
|
Homicide rate per 100,000 population
|
Average 1999-2001
|
5.56
6
|
1.51
6
|
Source 1:
US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, National Household
Survey on Drug Abuse: Volume I. Summary of National Findings
(Washington, DC: HHS, August 2002), p. 109, Table H.1.
Source 2:
Trimbos Institute, "Report to the EMCDDA by the Reitox
National Focal Point, The Netherlands Drug Situation 2002" (Lisboa,
Portugal: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction,
Nov. 2002), p. 28, Table 2.1.
Source 3:
Walmsley, Roy, "World Prison Population List (fifth
edition) (London, England: Research, Development and Statistics
Directorate of the Home Office), Dec. 2003, p. 3, Table 2.
Source 4:
Walmsley, Roy, "World Prison Population List (fifth
edition) (London, England: Research, Development and Statistics
Directorate of the Home Office), Dec. 2003, p. 5, Table 4.
Source 5:
van Dijk, Frans & Jaap de Waard, "Legal infrastructure of
the Netherlands in international perspective: Crime control"
(Netherlands: Ministry of Justice, June 2000), p. 9, Table S.13.
Source 6:
Barclay, Gordon, Cynthia Tavares, Sally Kenny, Arsalaan
Siddique & Emma Wilby, "International comparisons of criminal justice
statistics 2001," Issue 12/03 (London, England: Home Office Research,
Development & Statistics Directorate, October 2003), p. 10, Table 1.1.
- "There were 2.4 drug-related deaths per million inhabitants in the Netherlands in 1995. In France this figure was 9.5, in Germany 20, in Sweden 23.5 and in Spain 27.1. According to the 1995 report of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction in Lisbon, the Dutch figures are the lowest in Europe. The Dutch AIDS prevention programme was equally successful. Europe-wide, an average of 39.2% of AIDS victims are intravenous drug-users. In the Netherlands, this percentage is as low as 10.5%."
Source: Netherlands Ministry of Justice, Fact Sheet: Dutch Drugs Policy, (Utrecht: Trimbos Institute, Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction, 1999), from the Netherlands Justice Ministry website at
http://www.minjust.nl:8080/a_beleid/fact/cfact7.htm.
-
"The number of problem opiate/crack users seems to have
remained relatively stable in the past ten years (3.1 per
1000 people aged 15-64 years). In the past decade, local
field studies among traditional groups of problem opiate
users have shown a strong in-crease in the co-use of crack
cocaine, a reduction in injecting drug use, and an increase
in psychiatric and somatic comorbidity."
Source: Trimbos Institute, "Drug Situation 2006 The Netherlands
by the Reitox National Focal Point: Report to the EMCDDA"
(Utrecht, Netherlands: Trimbos-Instuut, 2007), p. 9.
- "Cannabis use among young people has also increased in most Western European countries and in the US. The rate of (cannabis) use among young people in the US is much higher than in the Netherlands, and Great Britain and Ireland also have relatively larger numbers of school students who use cannabis."
Source: Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, Drug Policy in the Netherlands: Progress Report September 1997-September 1999, (The Hague: Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, November 1999), p. 7.
- "The figures for cannabis use among the general population reveal the same pictures. The Netherlands does not differ greatly from other European countries. In contrast, a comparison with the US shows a striking difference in this area: 32.9% of Americans aged 12 and above have experience with cannabis and 5.1% have used in the past month. These figures are twice as high as those in the Netherlands."
Source: Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, Drug Policy in the Netherlands: Progress Report September 1997-September 1999, (The Hague: Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, November 1999), pp. 7-8.
- "The prevalence figures for cocaine use in the Netherlands do not differ greatly from those for other European countries. However, the discrepancy with the United States is very large. The percentage of the general population who have used cocaine at some point is 10.5% in the US, five times higher than in the Netherlands. The percentage who have used cocaine in the past month is 0.7% in the US, compared with 0.2% in the Netherlands.*"
Source: Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and
Sport, Drug Policy in the Netherlands: Progress Report September 1997-September 1999, (The Hague: Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, November 1999), p. 6. The report notes "*The figures quoted in this paragraph for drug use in the US are taken from the National Household Survey 1997, SAMHSA, Office of Applied Studies, Washington, DC".
-
"The National Youth Health Surveys (in 1988, 1992, 1996, 1999) among pupils (12-18 years) showed that the increase in cannabis use since 1988 stabilised between 1996 and 1999 (De Zwart et al. 2000). According to the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study, this trend continued in 2001 (Ter Bogt et al. 2003). Use of other drugs showed a similar trend or slightly drecreased (LTP of ecstasy and amphetamine)."
Source: Trimbos Institute, "Report to the EMCDDA by the Reitox National Focal Point, The Netherlands Drug Situation 2003" (Lisboa, Portugal: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Dec. 2003), p. 19.
For more information, check out
Drug War Facts: International Policies & Statistics.
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