Criminal Law and the Counter-Hegemonic Potential of Harm Reduction

Alana Klein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

Harm reduction approaches to drug use have been lauded for saving lives, being cost-effective, elevating pragmatism over prohibitionist ideology, being flexible in tailoring responses to the problem, and for their counter-hegemonic potential to empower people who use drugs. This article examines the legal systems engagement with harm reduction, and, in particular,recent cases that incorporate harm reduction s focus on empirical evidence in policy making into Canadian constitutional rights jurisprudence. It argues that harm reduction approaches in this venue may hold promise as a bulwark against some of the marginalizing features of traditional criminaljustice approaches. However, the article also warns of a risk of inadvertently reinforcing the dominant discourse of criminalization and stigmatization as harm reduction s features are embodied within the institutional frameworks of the state.
Original languageCanadian English
JournalDalhousie Law Journal
Issue number2.0
Publication statusPublished - Oct. 1 2015

Keywords

  • criminal law
  • harm reduction
  • drug
  • cost-effective
  • counter-hegemonic
  • empower
  • policy
  • Canada
  • constitutional rights
  • marginalization
  • stigmatization

Disciplines

  • Criminal Law

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