DRUG WAR HERESIES
Review by Randall M. Miller
Library Journal and Amazon.com Editorial Review
MacCoun and Reuter, former staff members at the RAND who study
drug policy and behavior, have produced one of the largest, most sweeping
comparative investigations of the contemporary use, regulation, and policing
of various drugs and addictive behaviors, all with an eye to suggesting how
the United States might decriminalize certain drugs and rethink public policy
toward addictive substances generally. The sheer weight and variety of the
authors' evidence, the especially instructive comparisons of addictive behaviors
and policies in Western European societies most akin to the United States,
and the linking of American policy to punitive antidrug practices in the
Third World give the authors' arguments an intellectual heft and force no
public discussion on the subject can hereafter ignore. Some readers will not
be persuaded by the authors' pointing to the subjective, and even inconclusive,
nature of "drug studies." So, too, the comparison of gambling, prostitution,
and alcohol consumption with heroin, cocaine, and marijuana use sometimes
strains the analysis. But the authors preach common sense rooted in evidence
rather than dogma; their temperate tone throughout and their command of the
subject make their book anything but a "heresy." Recommended for most collections.
Randall M. Miller, Saint Joseph's Univ., Philadelphia
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