Drug use up: prohibition files.

AuthorBrown, Elizabeth Nolan
PositionCitings - Brief article

IN 1980, about 5,000 Americans were serving time in federal prison for drug offenses. By 2012 the number was 95,000, according to an analysis from the Public Safety Performance Project at Pew Charitable Trusts. The average prison sentence for federal drug offenders also increased by 36 percent over this period, from 54.6 months to around 74 months. So has all this dampened our drug trade at least a little bit? As you probably guessed, the answer is no.

According to "the best available data," notes Pew, "increased penalties for drug offenders--both at the federal and state levels--have not significantly changed long-term patterns of drug availability or use." In national surveys, the share of Americans ages 12 and older who said they had used an illicit drug at least once in the past month rose from 6.7 percent in 1990 to 9.2 percent in 2012 (a trend driven by growing marijuana use, which offset cocaine's declining popularity). Meanwhile, drug...

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