By Chris Wilkins, Jose S. Romeo, Marta Rychert, Robin van der Sanden of

Photo: 123RF

Analysis: New Zealand's mainstay drug law turned 50 this year - yet we still don't have a clear, comprehensive picture of the social harms different drugs pose.

When the Misuse of Drugs Act was introduced in 1975, it codified a set of prohibitions shaped not only by evidence of social harm, but also by the politics and anxieties of the time.

Drug bans have historically reflected a mix of genuine harms, moral panic, political expediency, prevailing attitudes, prejudice against minority groups and industry influence.

More recently, scheduling decisions have been influenced by media coverage, public concern, piecemeal social statistics and the views of academics and agencies.

A common proxy for judging a drug's harm is the extent to which it is linked to dependency.

Several self-reported screening tools are used to assess dependency - but these typically bring a

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