Department of Social and Environmental Health Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of London, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, United Kingdom.
Int J Drug Policy. 2011 Nov;22(6):478-90. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2011.06.003. Epub 2011 Sep 3.
From the mid-1990s, UK governments developed partnerships to tackle drugs nationally and locally. Over time, increased resources focused on communities and localities in greatest need. This reflected growing awareness of the concentration of problems in deprived areas, with social and spatial segregation being a feature of post-industrial urban areas.
A review of English drug policy since the 1990s, drawing on:- analysis of documents; a review of sociological studies; an illustrative case-study of one northern town; interviews with local policy players; statistical analysis of key indicators with some of these data presented using Geographical Information System (GIS) mapping.
In-depth sociological studies demonstrate interconnections between historical patterns, socio-economic change, cultural complexity, deprivation, limited opportunities and illicit drugs. At local level, there are links between concentrated multiple deprivation, poor health, acquisitive crime and problematic drug use. Partnership policies, encouraged by the provision of ring-fenced funds, have been effective in containing problems. Underlying issues of inequality are however neglected in political debates. The article argues that post-industrial towns and cities are characterised by an increase in problems related to poverty and drugs. Both the real shape and perceptions of what is the problem change over time. In England, the profile of the problem drug user was described in a number of sociological studies conducted from the 1980s onwards. Key features were the concentration of problems in certain social groups (such as the poorly educated or unemployed) and in certain areas (inner cities or outer estates). Responding to rising public concern, national drug strategies developed and the New Labour Government after 1997 prioritised the issue of drugs, directing increased resources to drug treatment with tight control over the use of these new monies through target setting and measurement of performance. The emphasis was on the most dangerous drugs and most disadvantaged areas.
There is local variation in the pattern of problems and in implementation of national policies. In UK after 1997, New Labour policy aimed to promote a fair and cost-effective distribution of resources and improved availability and quality of treatment services and local policing. Tensions appeared between the drive to meet national targets and local perceptions of need. Ideas of localism, promoting market solutions and flexibility in provision, are now gaining ground in English social policy with the arrival of a Coalition (Conservative/Liberal Democrat) Government. These, together with an emphasis on abstinence and recovery, raise questions about the future adequacy of (a) attention to marginalised problems and stigmatised groups and (b) the distribution of resources in a context of severe fiscal restraint.
从 20 世纪 90 年代中期开始,英国政府就在全国和地方范围内制定了打击毒品的合作伙伴关系。随着时间的推移,更多的资源集中在最需要的社区和地方。这反映出人们越来越意识到问题集中在贫困地区,社会和空间隔离是后工业化城市地区的一个特征。
回顾了 20 世纪 90 年代以来英国的毒品政策,参考了以下内容:- 对文件的分析;对社会学研究的回顾;对北方一个城镇的案例研究;对当地政策参与者的访谈;对关键指标的统计分析,其中部分数据使用地理信息系统 (GIS) 映射呈现。
深入的社会学研究表明,历史模式、社会经济变化、文化复杂性、贫困、机会有限和非法药物之间存在相互联系。在地方一级,集中的多重贫困、健康状况不佳、 acquisitive 犯罪和吸毒问题之间存在联系。受专用资金提供鼓励的伙伴关系政策在遏制问题方面是有效的。然而,政治辩论中忽略了不平等的根本问题。本文认为,后工业化城镇和城市的特点是与贫困和毒品有关的问题增加。问题吸毒者的实际情况和认知随着时间的推移而变化。在英格兰,从 20 世纪 80 年代开始进行的一些社会学研究描述了问题吸毒者的特征。主要特征是问题集中在某些社会群体(如受教育程度低或失业者)和某些地区(内城或外郊)。针对公众日益关注的问题,国家毒品战略得以制定,1997 年后新工党政府将毒品问题作为优先事项,通过设定目标和衡量绩效,将更多资源用于药物治疗,并严格控制这些新资金的使用。重点是最危险的毒品和最贫困的地区。
问题模式和国家政策的实施存在地方差异。1997 年后的英国,新工党政策旨在促进资源的公平和具有成本效益的分配,并改善治疗服务的提供和质量,以及地方治安。在满足国家目标的动力和地方对需求的看法之间似乎存在紧张关系。地方主义、促进市场解决方案和提供灵活性的想法现在在英国社会政策中占据了一席之地,因为联合政府(保守党/自由民主党)的到来。这些以及对禁欲和康复的强调,引发了关于以下问题的未来充分性的问题:(a) 对边缘化问题和受污名群体的关注;(b) 在严重财政紧缩的情况下资源的分配。