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- From: rjesse@us.oracle.com (Robert Jesse)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,alt.psychoactives
- Subject: Re: Must-Own Books for Drug Users
- Date: 11 Sep 1994 20:32:23 GMT
- Message-ID: <34vpgo$7kr@dcsun4.us.oracle.com>
-
- Kleiman, Mark. _Against Excess: Drug Policy for Results_.
- (New York: BasicBooks 1992) 485 pages.
-
- Most of the drug debate in our society focuses on two policies:
- libertarian legalization of "drugs," or prohibition of "drugs."
- Surely it must have occurred to many people that between these
- extremes (and even at the extremes) there are a multitude of options.
- Mark Kleiman, a Harvard public policy expert, has written a book that
- explores these options clearly, thoroughly, and with an occasional
- touch of dry humor. Kleiman establishes an analytical framework into
- which the reader may insert his/her own beliefs about the world -
- about economics, crime, the risks associated with various substances,
- etc. - and then derive public policies to achieve specific results.
- Highly recommended reading.
-
- Plan of the Volume, from the Preface to _Against Excess_:
-
- Part I, "Preliminaries," argues that drug policy inevitably has multiple
- goals and is likely to be ill-served by simple policies expressed in
- bumper-sticker slogans.
-
- Part II, "Problems," explores the characteristics of drugs that set them
- apart from other consumer goods and make them appropriate subjects of
- special public policy attention. Chapter 2, "Drug Abuse and Other Bad
- Habits," is about why some users keep hurting themselves; Chapter 3,
- "The Other Victims of Drug Abuse," is about how they hurt others.
-
- Part III, "Policies," develops the vocabulary of public actions - laws
- and programs - to control drug problems. The laws - taxes, regulations,
- and prohibitions - are the topics of Chapter 4. Chapter 5 considers the
- black markets that are likely to arise from drug laws. Chapter 6 examines
- programs to enfore the laws; Chapter 7 looks at programs to influence
- drug-taking behavior by persuasion and to provide helpfor, and impose
- control on, problem drug users.
-
- Part IV, "Drugs," applies the analysis developed in the first three parts
- to five drugs: alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, tobacco, and heroin.
-
- Part V is a recapitulation.
-
- From Part V, p 388:
-
- Public policy toward drugs involves so many unknown, almost unknowable
- facts and so many complicated issues of value that any certainty about
- which of two alternative policies is the better is likely to be misplaced.
- This book has reached many conclusions and argued for many recommendations,
- but most of them could prove to be wrong under plausible factual
- circumstances or as measured against defensible sets of values. Even the
- underlying belief that careful reasong will produce better policies than
- enthusiasm and emotion is not invariably true; fanaticism can work wonders,
- and sometimes, if only by accident, it is deployed in good causes. But
- neither individuals nor nations can remain in a passionate frenzy forever;
- eventually we must learn to discuss our drug policies without raising our
- voices.
-
- No doubt anyone who has read this far has disagreed with more than one of
- the opinions offered. This is as it should be. This book was designed to
- enable those of its readers who prefer to act on their considered judgements
- rather than on their emotions and their prejudices to do so in the drug
- policy arean. That their judgements should be the same as mine was no
- part of my purpose.
-
-
-