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Samenvatting
Tensions between the central national level and the local level become clearly visible in coffee shop policies, which have to fit within the international VN and EU treaties and strategies, national drug policy principles and local interests of public order. Three cases, all concerning long-term problems of drug tourism, nuisance and crime around coffee shops, illustrate these tensions. In the case of coffee shop Checkpoint near the Belgian border the Public Prosecutor aimed at solving the problem by prosecuting the coffee shop as a criminal network, while the mayor tried to minimize the negative effects by facilitating visitor flows. In the case of the private club and residence criterion in 2012 not all the mayors actually enforced these national criteria. This leads to a bigger emphasis on local tailoring. Thirdly, several mayors have opted for a regulation of cannabis production for coffee shops, while the stance of the national government is that international treaties banning this practice should be respected. The influence of local policies may be small, but in the end the local communities seem crucial when it comes to finding new ways of managing drug problems.
Justitiële verkenningen |
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Article | Wie heeft hier de regie?Coffeeshops tussen lokaal, nationaal en internationaal drugsbeleid |
Trefwoorden | coffee shops, drug policy, international drug treaties, drug tourism, multi-level governance |
Auteurs | Dr. M. van Ooyen-Houben en Dr. A. Mein |
DOI | 10.5553/JV/016758502015041002005 |
Auteursinformatie |
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