Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content

Moving drug policy reform forward at the local level

Michel Sidibé

Moderator

date November 5, 2024 | 15:00 - 16:30
place
Voices from Cities - room B
organization
Global Commission on Drug Policy
country
Switzerland
language
English
Reference: 
VC-B 4

Summary

Cities or municipalities are central to the design of public policies, including drug policies. Cities are the level of government closest to the reality of what is happening on the ground and it is cities that suffer the most, in terms of paying the costs (financial, social and human) of the negative consequences of repressive drug control policies in countries all around the world. At the same time, it is at the local level that initiatives - sometimes developed in contrast to national policies - may be developed, before being piloted and sometimes leading to change at the national level.
In addition to its work at the international, regional and national levels, the Global Commission on Drug Policy (GCDP) - founded in 2011 by former Heads of State and Government from the Americas and Europe, with the aim of opening an honest debate on drugs and inspiring better drug policies globally - has also been advocating for the importance of supporting local drug policy reform, taking into account health, human rights and safety considerations (see the Global Commission’s 2021 position paper : Drug Policy and City Government).
In July 2023, the Global Commission held a Cities for Drug Policy Reform Consultation in Glasgow, Scotland where it met with a small group of relevant actors to discuss how cities can help cities to promote changes in their responses to complex issues related to drug policy and practice; as well as see how the Global Commission could help cities and other local authorities in coming together and furthering drug policy reform in their respective jurisdictions. Crucial to the Cities’ Strategy for Drug Policy Reform is the development of a set of Common Principles - grounded in human rights – to help guide local authorities that are interested in signing on to the Cities’ Strategy.
Collaboration between the Global Commission on Drug Policy and UN Habitat on the question of local drug policy reform is essential, particularly seeing how Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 11 - “to make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable” - and drug policy issues are inextricably linked.

The session will present the Cities’ Strategy for Drug Policy Reform being developed by the Global Commission on Drug Policy, as well as elements of the Common Principles. It will also provide an opportunity for certain local authorities and partners from cities around the world to share their perspectives on various drug policy reform issues that they are dealing with at their respective local levels, as well the value of engaging with this Cities’ Strategy for Drug Policy Reform.

Objectives

The primary objective of the session is to present the Cities’ Strategy for Drug Policy Reform and work that is being done across the world, in cities such as Bern, Glasgow, Melbourne, Tshwane, Vancouver and others. The aim is to show what can and is already being done at the local level, in terms of drug policy reform, to advance health and human rights for urban citizens, while also identifying various challenges and what can be done to overcome them.
Additional key objectives include:
- Highlighting the links between drug policy and the urban agenda;
- Showcasing drug policy reform work being done at local level in various parts of the world; and the need for further supporting that work.
- Presenting the GCDP Cities’ video animation and the set of Common Principles linked to the Cities’ Strategy for Drug Policy Reform which are being developed together with government partners, civil society and relevant actors.

Session panelists

Panelist
Role
Organization
Country
Mr. Graham Alabaster
Chief, Geneva Office
UN Habitat
Ms. Claudia Lopez
Former Mayor of Bogota
Colombia
Ms. Sally Cap
Mayor of the City of Melbourne
City of Melbourne
Ms. Judy Chang
Executive Director
International Network of People who Use Drugs