Pubdate: Sun, 15 Sep 2013
Source: Observer, The (UK)
Copyright: 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited
Contact:  http://www.observer.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315
Author: Jamie Doward

THE TUDOR PILE THAT'S HOME TO A THINKTANK SET ON SHAKING UP BRITAIN'S DRUG LAWS

 From Her Oxfordshire Home, Amanda Feilding Leads a Group With the 
Sort of Academic and Political Influence That Could See Cannabis 
Being Legalised - And, Crucially, Regulated

Beckley Park, a moated stately home in Oxfordshire, built during the 
reign of Henry VIII, seems the sort of place that inspires writers to 
hyperbole. Its gardens boast perfect boxwood topiary, fires burn in 
huge grates and nobility look down imperiously from thick stone walls.

So it is no surprise to learn that Beckley has featured in at least 
one novel. The author of Brave New World, Aldous Huxley, set his 
first book, a satirical novel called Crome Yellow, at Beckley.

Huxley, who wrote The Doors of Perception, an exploration of the 
altered state of consciousness he experienced while taking the drug 
mescaline, was a visitor to the house in the 1920s. But not even a 
visionary such as he could have foreseen that Beckley would go on 
pushing at the doors of perception long after he had died.

The Grade I-listed home is the headquarters of the Beckley Foundation 
(beckleyfoundation.org), a thinktank that is testing the boundaries 
of drugs policy reform with a persistence that has seen it amass a 
strong body of academic and political support, but has also drawn 
huge controversy.

Headed by Amanda Feilding, who is Countess of Wemyss and March but 
prefers not to use the title, the foundation has helped frame open 
letters, published in national newspapers, signed by past and present 
presidents, businessmen and other global leaders pushing the case for 
reform of the UN's prohibitionist drugs conventions.

"Drugs are more heavily regulated than nuclear weapons," said 
Feilding, an adviser to Guatemala's president, Otto Perez Molina, the 
leading advocate for global drug policy reform.

"I'm not for making drugs available at Tesco," she added, "but common 
sense suggests the answer is regulation. We have got caught in a 
terrible misconception about drugs. We all know people who have died 
and suffered from them. But 200,000 people a year around the world 
die from using illegal drugs, compared with five million from tobacco."

Beckley was responsible for producing, in 2007, a scale of harm 
register for drugs, both legal and illegal, that ranks substances 
according to the risks they pose to users. The register has been 
taken up widely across Europe, but it does not help the foundation's 
cause that Feilding's belief in the medicinal properties of illegal 
drugs has led to her being portrayed as a sort of refugee from the 
1960s who wants to revive the decade's hippy counter-culture.

Feilding has instigated, co-authored and funded research conducted by 
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, US, into how magic mushrooms used with

psychotherapy can produce what she claims is an almost 100% success 
rate in helping people overcome addictions.

She has also worked with several prestigious British universities, 
looking into issues including whether MDMA (ecstasy) can help people 
with posttraumatic stress disorder, and whether cannabis can be a 
useful analgesic.

It is this latter drug that is occupying much of Feilding's attention 
at present. This week, Beckley will publish a 143page cost-benefit 
analysis examining what would happen if cannabis was licensed, and 
regulated, in England and Wales.

The study, conducted by the widely respected Institute for Social and 
Economic Research (iser.essex.ac.uk), is a model of rigorous academic 
analysis, carefully caveating its findings and outlining three 
scenarios illustrating what could happen to demand if cannabis was 
decriminalised.

Few such studies have been attempted, and most have made wild assumptions.

"One of the difficulties in working in this area is that the public 
debate is of such low quality," said one of the report's authors, 
Stephen Pudney, professor of economics at the University of Essex. 
"There are lots of people taking one side or another. Our intention 
was almost to draw up a shopping list of things you would need to 
achieve [in terms of regulation] to have a better debate."

The ISER research is likely to be studied closely by politicians in 
the US states of Colorado and Washington, who have voted to legalise 
marijuana, as well as those in Uruguay, which is to become the first 
country to introduce a legal, regulated market for cannabis, 
encouraging growers and sellers to produce in large enough quantities 
to put drug traffickers out of business. The report examines 13 
factors, including the cost to policing and courts, mental health 
services, the cost of regulating the new market and potential 
increases in crime as a result of more people using cannabis.

It assumes cannabis would be taxed at 70% (compared with 72% for 
alcohol and 83% for tobacco) and that its level of 
tetrahydrocannabinol  THC, the mindaltering substance found in 
cannabis  would be restricted to 10%. Much of the cannabis currently 
sold on Britain's streets contains around 15% THC.

Agreeing a level of taxation is difficult, Pudney admits. Too low and 
there would be claims that the government is promoting drug 
consumption. Too high and the illicit market would continue to 
thrive. "It's the same debate as with tobacco," he added. "If you 
raise taxes it encourages smuggling."

Under the most plausible scenarios outlined in the report, a licensed 
cannabis market would see consumption of the drug in volume terms 
rise between 15% and 20%, while the illicit share would be somewhere 
between 20% and 30%.

The report states: "We estimate that tax revenue from licensed 
cannabis supply in England and Wales would fall somewhere in the 
range UKP0.4bn-UKP0.9bn." And once the reduced costs, such as for 
policing, and the extra costs, such as regulation, are factored in, 
the authors say the contribution of cannabis licensing in England and 
Wales to the exchequer "is expected to lie in the range UKP0.5bn-1.25bn".

But to focus simply on the numbers would be to miss the key point, 
Pudney argues. Regulation would allow the government to control the 
licensed drug's content. For example, the government could insist 
that the cannabidiol (CBD) content of the drug, the anti-psychotic 
component that balances out THC, be increased, or THC levels reduced. 
In this way, a regulated market might help counter the huge explosion 
in skunk, the potent strain of high-THC cannabis that is linked to psychosis.

Pudney is the first to admit there are many unknowns. Would, for 
example, the UK experience a rise in drug tourism, with its 
associated costs? And on the question of cannabis becoming a gateway 
to other, possibly more dangerous drugs, Pudney and his team are dubious.

"In our view, the evidence for a large gateway effect among cannabis 
consumers is weak," they write.

Feilding said the ISER report showed the case for regulation was 
strong. "If you are going to protect the young, then I believe 
governments can do a better job than the cartels," Feilding said. 
"People like changing their consciousness, and they're going to go on 
liking it."

Huxley would surely agree.

[sidebar]

CANNABIS LAWS A BRIEF HISTORY

July 2001

Start of 13-month cannabis decriminalisation experiment in London 
Borough of Lambeth.

October 2001

Home Secretary David Blunkett announced intention to reclassify 
cannabis from class B to class C.

July 2002

Drug tsar Keith Hellawell resigns in protest at plans to reclassify cannabis.

January 2006

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) advises retaining 
cannabis in class C, following Government request for reconsideration 
in light of concerns about psychotic illness and increased supply of 
high-potency sinsemilla ("skunk").

January 2009

Cannabis reclassified as class B.

October 2009

Firing of ACMD chairman Professor David Nutt is followed, over the 
subsequent six months, by the resignation of seven other ACMD members 
in protest at the government's response to its recommendations.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom