Understanding Successful Policy innovation: the case of Portuguese drug policy

Commentary
by
Moury, Catherine & Mafalda Escada

Release Date

2022

Geography

Portugal

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

In 2000, the Portuguese minority socialist government decriminalised the possession and consumption of drugs. This law made Portugal unique in having a formal system that directs the person using drugs to a panel under the purview of the Ministry of Health, as opposed to the Ministry of Justice, and hence constitutes an ‘Original Innovation’. In this article, we ask under which conditions such kinds of reforms are introduced and successfully implemented

Findings/Key points

We argue that successful policy innovation in democracies will only occur and persist when six institutional and individual ‘stars’ are aligned: attention, motivation to innovate, a new solution, political strategies, quality and legitimacy of the decision-making process, and guarantees for full implementation. We then apply this framework to the Portuguese drug policy case through theory-testing/process-tracing.

Keywords

Decriminalization/legalization
Policy/Regulatory
Advocacy