Total systems failure: police officers' perspectives on the impacts of the justice, health, and social service systems on people who use drugs.

Amanda Butler, Naomi Zakimi, Alissa Greer
Author Information
  1. Amanda Butler: School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada. albutler@sfu.ca.
  2. Naomi Zakimi: School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada.
  3. Alissa Greer: School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Police in Canada have become main responders to behavioural health concerns in the community-a role that disproportionately harms people who use drugs (PWUD). Recent calls to defund the police emphasize the need to shift responsibility for non-criminal health issues from police to health and social services. This study explores the role of police interactions in responding to PWUD within the broader institutional and structural contexts in which they operate.
METHODS: We conducted a qualitative thematic analysis of interviews with sixteen police officers across nine jurisdictions in British Columbia, Canada. We examined police officers' everyday policing experiences interacting with PWUD, enforcing drug laws, and working alongside other service sectors.
RESULTS: Officers explained that the criminal justice system is one component of a wider network of systems that collectively fail to meet the needs of PWUD. They recognized that PWUD who interact with police often experienced intersecting structural vulnerabilities such as poverty, homelessness, and intergenerational trauma. Harmful drug laws in conjunction with inadequate treatment and housing resources contributed to a funnelling of PWUD into interactions with police. They provided several recommendations for reform including specialized health and justice roles, formalized intersectoral collaboration, and poverty reduction.
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, this study provides unique insights into the positioning and role of police officers within a "total systems failure" that negatively impact PWUD. Police have become responders-by-default for issues that are fundamentally related to people's health conditions and socioeconomic circumstances. Addressing failures across the health, social, and justice systems to meet the needs of PWUD will require an examination of the shortcomings across these systems, as well as substantial funding and system reforms.

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MeSH Term

British Columbia
Ill-Housed Persons
Housing
Humans
Police
Social Work

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0policePWUDhealthsystemsjusticerolesocialacrossPoliceCanadabecomepeopleusedrugsissuesstudyinteractionswithinstructuralofficersofficers'druglawsservicesystemmeetneedspovertyBACKGROUND:mainrespondersbehaviouralconcernscommunity-adisproportionatelyharmsRecentcallsdefundemphasizeneedshiftresponsibilitynon-criminalservicesexploresrespondingbroaderinstitutionalcontextsoperateMETHODS:conductedqualitativethematicanalysisinterviewssixteenninejurisdictionsBritishColumbiaexaminedeverydaypolicingexperiencesinteractingenforcingworkingalongsidesectorsRESULTS:OfficersexplainedcriminalonecomponentwidernetworkcollectivelyfailrecognizedinteractoftenexperiencedintersectingvulnerabilitieshomelessnessintergenerationaltraumaHarmfulconjunctioninadequatetreatmenthousingresourcescontributedfunnellingprovidedseveralrecommendationsreformincludingspecializedrolesformalizedintersectoralcollaborationreductionCONCLUSIONS:Overallprovidesuniqueinsightspositioning"totalfailure"negativelyimpactresponders-by-defaultfundamentallyrelatedpeople'sconditionssocioeconomiccircumstancesAddressingfailureswillrequireexaminationshortcomingswellsubstantialfundingreformsTotalfailure:perspectivesimpacts

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