Document details

Measuring drug policy evolution: a cross-country analysis

Author(s): Gonçalves, Ricardo ; Lourenço. Ana ; Marreiros, Helia

Date: 2025

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/52794

Origin: Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Subject(s): Policy index; Leximetrics; Comparative law; Drug policy


Description

Drug policies significantly impact public health and criminal justice outcomes, yet quantitative tools for systematically comparing approaches across jurisdictions remain limited. This paper uses a state-of-the-art comparative law method – leximetrics – to construct the Illicit Drugs Policy Indexes (IDPI), a valuable resource for assessing the evolution of drug policies over time within a specific country as well as across countries. The IDPI consists of a set of indexes corresponding to multiple dimensions of drug policy, including laws around consumption, possession and traffic. These indexes examine illicit drug laws and policies across seven countries: Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal and the United Kingdom, over a timeframe of twenty years from 1996 to 2016. Our results identify significant turning points in the evolution of laws regarding drugs, often indicating a shift towards less criminal-oriented approaches. Moreover, the paper identifies the countries which progressed more in that direction, over time. The underlying IDPI methodology provides policymakers and researchers with a standardized framework for evidence-based drug policy evaluation and reform, adaptable across jurisdictions.

Document Type Research article
Language English
Contributor(s) Veritati
CC Licence
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