Exhibition Website frenchdutchparadox.org

Travelling exhibition on French/Dutch cannabis paradox to premiere at United Nations in Vienna

 

VIENNA – A new travelling exhibition comparing the divergent cannabis policies of France and the Netherlands will premiere in Vienna on March 12, coinciding with the annual meeting of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND).

The year 2026 marks a dual 50th anniversary: the birth of the Dutch tolerance policy for cannabis, which paved the way for their world-famous coffeeshops, and the publication of ‘L’Appel du 18 Joint’, a plea by a group of prominent French citizens for decriminalization of cannabis.

The exhibition, ‘1976-2026 – The French/Dutch Paradox in the Global Drug War’, explores half a century of cannabis policy within these two founding members of the European Union, contrasting pragmatic regulation with rigid prohibition.

Visitors can trace the evolution of the Dutch model, up to the current experiment with regulated cannabis cultivation, supplying around 80 coffeeshops. The contrast with France is stark. The 1976 appeal has evolved into a French “420”, with demonstrations for legalization all over France on June 18. Yet the law remains strict and repression persists. Despite decades of criminalisation and mass arrests, France continues to see the highest cannabis consumption rates in Europe.

What’s on display? The heart of the exhibition is a narrative wall featuring photos, illustrations and English texts. A display case contains historical artefacts depicting Dutch and French cannabis culture. There’s a live cannabis plant in a cage and a section dedicated to the late Joep Oomen (1961-2016), drug reform activist extraordinaire and co-founder of NGOs Encod and stichting VOC.

The project is a collaboration between Encod (European coalition for just and effective policies), stichting VOC, Cannabis Sans Frontières, FAAAT and the Cannabis Embassy.

Nine cities in seven countries

Following its Vienna debut, the exhibition will travel to Bilbao, Berlin, Paris, Brussels, Prague, Amsterdam, The Hague and Eindhoven. The goal is to show it in nine cities in seven countries. Leaflets with translations of the exhibition texts in five languages are available, as well as a comprehensive 24-page guide featuring further information and imagery.

Vienna: March 12

The exhibition will be stationed in front of the Vienna International Centre (VIC) on Thursday March 12. Board members from Encod and stichting VOC will be on site to talk to visitors, international delegates and journalists.

 

Website: www.frenchdutchparadox.org

Gaby Kozar, Encod coordinator (Vienna): gaby@encod.org Phone: +43 699 123 790 86

More information: www.voc-nederland.org

 

THE FRENCH / DUTCH PARADOX IN THE GLOBAL DRUG WAR 

REPORT ON FRANCE

Here you can find the names and adresses of Members of Parliament in France

Legislation on consumption and posession of drugs

Consumption of any product listed in the first annex to the list of controlled drugs can be sanctioned with a one year prison sentence and a 3.750 € fine.

However, since june 2013, the pharmaceutical industry has obtained the possibility of requesting approval for the commercialisation of medicines containing the cannabis flower or its derivates, specially the synthetic ones.

At the date of 2017, the only pharmaceutical preparation that has been proposed for comercialisation is Sativex® (Nabiximols). Although it has fulfilled all the selective criteria for theoretical commercialization, it hasn’t still obtained the final approval for social security reimbursment, which still blocks its access in chemistries.

Cannabis Social Clubs

There is no Cannabis Social Club in France. In 2012-2013, there has been an attempt to create small-scale Cannabis growers and smokers clubs, and obtain an official recognition just as any other association. They have all been denied. Several failed efforts were made to create a Federation of Clubs.

Between 2015 and 2016, the NGO NORML France (former Chanvre & Libertés) conduced series of workshops with experts, users and officials, to design a new legal and operational kit for the creation of CSCs in France. The outcome of this cycle of reflexion was still unreleased at the end of summer 2017.

Safe Drug Consumption Rooms

For years, the municipality of Paris together with organisations of drug users and harm reduction services, have been working on the establishment of an experimental user room in northern Paris. The opening of the room has been several times postponed and loudly questioned by the neighbourhood, but is running since October 2016, and a second one has opened in Strasbourg in November of the same year. That has been made possible by a change of the prohibition law (in the reform of Health system undertaken under François Hollande’s mandate) allowing such experimentation for 6 years.

Main political parties for the European Elections

  • PCF (French Communist Party) — in the EP members of GUE/NGL
  • FI (Unsubjugated France) — in the EP members of GUE/NGL
  • EELV (Europe Écologie-Les Verts) — historical greens party — in the EP members of Greens/ALE
  • PS (Social-democrat Party) — former 2nd political force, nowadays minor — in the EP members of S&D
  • LREM (La République En Marche) — party of Emmanuel Macron, created 2016, currently not represented in the EP
  • MoDem (Mouvement des Démocrates) — historical centrists — in the EP members of -* ALDE
  • UDI (Union des Démocrates indépendants) — Right-wing Centrists — in the EP members of EPP
  • LR (les Républicains) — historical right-wing party — in the EP members of EPP
  • FN (Front National) — ultra-right party — in the EP members of ENL

What is the position of these parties on:

Drug Policy Reform

Even if a lot of personalities from any tendencies personally tend to express themselves more about the failed “war on drugs”, there is no political party in France which has adopted an official position that is favorable to any flexibilisation of drug policies. Only the EELV party (Ecologists) has been including the legalisation of cannabis in its programme for decades, without making a lot of fuss around the issue. Although the issue popped-up int he 2017 presidential campaign, there seem to be no plan for a broader reform of drug policies, and no elected political force seem to be ready to struggle for that cause.

Harm Reduction, health-based approach on drugs

The policy of « harm reduction » was accepted a minima in the 2000’s. Since then, nothing more has been developed, until the 2016 law of modernisation of health systems that allowed the opening of drug-consumption rooms, and strengthened the security for harm reduction workers, as well as their mission and their margins of action. Political parties try to avoid talking about this topic.

Decriminalisation of cannabis and/or other drugs

The very idea of an eventual change concerning Cannabis policies has simply a taboo for decades, until the 2017 presidential elections, where that topic could be debated in the campaign as a regular theme. The newly elected Emmanuel Macron talked timidly about a possible decriminalization of drug use, and the previous government of François Hollande had been preparing in background several plans to make evolve the way penalties for drug consumption are enforced.

Cannabis Social Clubs

Political parties are rather ignorant about this subject, so they have no chance to be aware of new concepts such as the CSCs.

What are the two most important threats on the political and legal front?

Even though drug consumers are less and less imprisoned, they are still politically and socially heavily stigmatised. People who use drugs in France have important risks to be set aside and isolated from society and services because of their consumption of illicit plants or substances. Social and professional exclusion are an important threat. Legally speaking, they are always under risk of having to face justice. Besides, the generalisation of traffic controls on the base of suspicion has led to an important increase of driving license suspension, which can also lead to job loss, geographical isolation, family problems (especially for isolated mono-parental families, for instance). Apart from the Financial consequences (fines, lawyers, seizures etc.).

The project of the new government of Macron (elected in May 2017) is to turn drug possession or consumption into an administrative fine (which would not though make totally disappear the possibility of penal sanctions). These fines, expected to be over €500, would have an exagerated over-impacting on the most vulnerable populations.

What is the most promising or positive development concerning drug policy?

The modest arrival of therapeutical cannabis, but mostly the positive evolutions happening abroad (Spain, USA, Uruguay, Portugal, Czech republic, Germany, Colombia, etc..) has helped to reconsider the question of the place of drug use in our modern society. There is hope that the new generation of politicians brought by Emmanuel Macron’s election will be less liable to stick to the prohibitionist taboo than their predecessors, and at least release pressure over drug consumption.

But what gives us most hope in France are the evolutions abroad (USA, Uruguay, Portugal, Czech republic, etc..)

Redacted by Farid Ghehioueche & Kenzi Riboulet Zemouli, FAAAT think & do tank — info [at] faaat.net

Encod contact in France:
Florent Buffière, NORML France – info [at] norml.fr

Last updated: August 2017