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Int. J. Drug Policy · Mar 2007
How the harm reduction movement contrasts itself against punitive prohibition.
- Tuukka Tammi and Toivo Hurme.
- Finnish Foundation for Alcohol Studies, Helsinki, Finland. tuukka.tammi@helsinki.fi <tuukka.tammi@helsinki.fi>
- Int. J. Drug Policy. 2007 Mar 1;18(2):84-7.
AbstractOn the basis of the harm reduction movement's founding texts from the beginning of the 1990s, this paper reflects the movement's self-understanding in contrasting itself with the system of punitive prohibition. Following this is a discussion of the implications for drug users of harm reduction claims-making. The paper concludes that the principles of the harm reduction movement resonate extremely well with the moral sensibilities of our contemporary societies, and but that the movement's claims for an amoral, rational, just, and emancipating approach to drug use are to be seen rather as a powerful rhetorical intervention in the highly moralised landscape of drug debate than something that would be achieved in practice.
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