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Article 33: Protection from Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances PDF

106 Pages·2012·0.87 MB·English
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Article 33 Protection from Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances The titles published in this series are listed at brill.nl/cunc A Commentary on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child Editors André Alen, Johan Vande Lanotte, Eugeen Verhellen, Fiona Ang, Eva Berghmans, Mieke Verheyde, and Bruce Abramson Article 33 Protection from Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances By Damon Barrett and Philip E. Veerman With a foreword by Dr. Dainius Puras Leiden • boston 2012 Cover illustration: Naida, 1½ years old. this book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data Barrett, Damon.  Article 33 : protection from narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances / by damon Barrett and Philip E. Veerman ; with a foreword by Dainius Puras.   p. cm. – (A commentary on the United nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, issn 1574-8626)  isbn 978-90-04-14732-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Children—drug use. 2. Children—substance use. 3. Children (international law) 4. Children—Legal status, laws, etc. 5. Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). Article 33. 6. substance abuse. i. Veerman, Philip e. ii. title.  K639.b37 2012  344.03’2290261--dc23 2012000217 issn 1574-8626 isbn 978 90 04 14732 4 (paperback) isbn 978 90 04 21693 8 (e-book) Copyright 2012 by Koninklijke brill nV, Leiden, the netherlands. Koninklijke brill nV incorporates the imprints Brill, Global oriental, Hotei Publishing, idC Publishers and Martinus nijhoff Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke brill nV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood drive, suite 910, danvers, MA 01923, UsA. Fees are subject to change. Contents List of Abbreviations  .................................................................................... vii Author biographies ....................................................................................... ix text of Article 33  ........................................................................................... xi Foreword by dr. dainius Puras  ................................................................... xiii 1. introduction  ............................................................................................ 1 1. drugs and the CRC: A neglected issue ............................................ 1 2. Children As Justification in drug Control  ...................................... 5 3. Article 33 in Academic Literature and drug Policy discourse  ... 8 2. Comparison with Related Human Rights Provisions  ........................ 13 1. Relationship to other international instruments  ........................ 13 2. Relationship to other Articles of the CRC  ..................................... 19 3. scope of Article 33  .................................................................................. 29 1. How the CRC Committee Has dealt with Article 33  ..................... 29 2. Unpacking the text  ........................................................................... 36 2.1. ‘shall take All Appropriate Measures’  .................................. 36 2.2. ‘Including Legislative, Administrative, Social and educational Measures’  .............................................................. 39 2.3. ‘Protect Children from the illicit Use’  ................................... 42 2.4. ‘narcotic drugs and Psychotropic substances As defined in the Relevant international treaties’  ................................. 44 2.5. ‘Prevent the Use of Children in the Illicit Production and trafficking of such substances’  .............................................. 47 3. Commentary on the text  ................................................................. 48 3.1. First Substantive Protection: Four Levels of Protection of Children from the Illicit Use of Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic substances  ......................................................... 48 3.1.a Appropriate Measures to Reduce the initiation of drug Use by Children  .................................................... 48 3.1.b Appropriate Measures to Protect Children Currently Using drugs  .................................................. 53 3.1.c Appropriate Measures to Protect Children from drug Use in the Family  ................................................. 58 vi contents 3.1.d Appropriate Measures to Protect Children from drug Use in the Community  ........................................ 63 3.2. Second Substantive Protection: Appropriate Measures to Prevent the Use of Children in the Illicit Production and trafficking of such substances  ............................................... 66 3.2.a Appropriate Measures to Prevent the Use of Children in illicit Production and trafficking  .......... 67 3.2.b Appropriate Measures Relating to Children Suspected of or in Fact Involved in Illicit Production and trafficking  .......................................... 69 3.2.c Involvement in the Illicit Production and trafficking of drugs As a Worst Form of Child Labour  .............................................................................. 71 3.3. What Are the ‘Relevant international treaties’ and Which drugs Are Captured by Article 33?  ......................................... 73 3.3.a international drug Conventions  ................................. 73 3.3.b WHo Framework Convention on tobacco Control  ... 74 3.3.c Alcohol  ............................................................................ 75 3.3.d solvents  ........................................................................... 76 3.3.e the CRC and the Policy Paradigm for drug Control  ............................................................................. 76 3.4. Interpreting the UN Drug Conventions Alongside the CRC  ........................................................................................ 78 3.4.a Crop eradication  ............................................................ 80 3.4.b drug dependence treatment  ...................................... 84 3.4.c Harm Reduction  ............................................................. 85 3.4.d Access to essential Controlled Medicines  .................. 87 Conclusion  ...................................................................................................... 91 List oF AbbReViAtions AdHd Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity disorder APHA American Public Health Association CESCR Committee UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights CND UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs CRC Convention on the Rights of the Child CRC Committee UN Committee on the Rights of the Child dsM-iV diagnostic and statistical Manual of Mental disorders 4th edition FCtC WHo Framework Convention on tobacco Control ICCPR International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ICESCR International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights IDP Internally Displaced Person iLo international Labour organization INCB International Narcotics Control Board IPEC International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour oPAC optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of Children in Armed Conflict ost opioid substitution therapy UnAids Joint United nations Program on HiV/Aids UnodC United nations office on drugs and Crime UniCeF United nations Children’s Fund WHo World Health organization AUtHoR bioGRAPHies Damon Barrett is senior Human Rights Analyst with London-based Harm Reduction International and cofounder of the International Centre on Human Rights and drug Policy. He is an editor-in-chief of the International Journal on Human Rights and Drug Policy, and editor of Children of the Drug War: Perspectives on the Impact of Drug Policies on Young People (ideA, idebate Press, new York and Amsterdam, 2011). E mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Philip E. Veerman is a psychologist at Bouman mental health services in Rotterdam, where he is responsible for the professional training programme for health psychologists. He is an independent expert of the courts in the Netherlands. E mail: [email protected]; [email protected]

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This volume constitutes a commentary on Article 33 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. It is part of the series, "A Commentary on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child", which provides an article by article analysis of all substantive, organizational and p
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