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9 - Conclusion: UN Drug Control in the Twenty-First Century

Towards a Regime Complex?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2021

John Collins
Affiliation:
Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, Vienna
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Summary

This chapter argues that whereas much of the past century was geared towards a legal and institutional homogenisation of international drug control, the coming decades appear underpinned by recourse to ‘policy pluralism’ as a mechanism to enable policy evolution. It is precisely these endogenous processes of pluralism, devolution and increasing diversity of global drug policies that provide the most promising avenues for various actors to influence policies at local, national, regional and international levels. It further argues that the international drug control system is undergoing a long-term process of fragmentation and evolution towards what international relations scholars in other spheres would term a ‘regime complex’. It concludes by suggesting that these endogenous regime changes likely provide the greatest opportunity to draw exogenous actors and regimes into the system’s orbit and thereby modernise and adapt drug policies to new global realities.

Type
Chapter
Information
Legalising the Drug Wars
A Regulatory History of UN Drug Control
, pp. 204 - 224
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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