Abstract

An increase in the use of postal services to deliver drugs purchased online raises concerns about widening access to drugs markets, especially in remote and rural areas that were previously protected by geographical boundaries. Yet little is known about the geographical patterning of drugs delivered through the post. Using a novel law enforcement dataset containing details of illegal drug packages intercepted by UK Border Force en route to Scotland, we examine the geographical destination of drugs purchased online and explore the area-based characteristics associated with higher rates of delivery. This article provides previously unavailable insights into the spatial patterning of digital drugs markets at sub-national level. We use descriptive statistics, Bayesian hierarchical regression models, and spatial autocorrelation to describe the relationship between area-based characteristics and expected rate of illegal drug consignments identified across Scotland. The majority of intercepted drug packages were destined for urban centres, but there was a higher than expected delivery rate to some of Scotland’s remote and rural locations. Increased rates of drug delivery within Scottish neighbourhoods was independently associated with higher levels of crime and deprivation, with Internet connectivity and with access to services, but not with higher rates of drug-related hospitalization. Analysis of spatial clustering showed that drug delivery to the most remote and rural locations was still associated with good access to services because the packages were typically delivered to addresses in larger settlements within remote locations. Overall, postal drugs delivery reflects both relatively high use in more urban, more deprived areas but also seems to open up more remote regions to drug markets, albeit with usage concentrated in larger settlements within otherwise remote areas.

Highlights

  • In recent years the use of postal services to transport illegal drugs has expanded substantially, driven by online purchases through surface-net websites, darknet cryptomarkets1 and, increasingly, social media (European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and Europol, 2019: 64)

  • Previous studies on the geography of digital drug markets have focused on international drugs flows, which, important, do not help to inform national or local law enforcement and health services, which may find that digital drug markets have differential effects within countries

  • These results present an interesting, albeit complex, geographical picture of the postal supply of drugs within Scotland and highlight the potential of administrative data to explore the impact of digital drugs markets

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Summary

Introduction

In recent years the use of postal services to transport illegal drugs has expanded substantially, driven by online purchases through surface-net websites, darknet cryptomarkets and, increasingly, social media (European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and Europol, 2019: 64) This trend has created concerns about widening access to drugs markets, especially to those living in geographical areas that were previously protected by virtue of their physical remoteness. This article uses data from the National Crime Agency (NCA) – a national law enforcement agency in the UK that focuses on, amongst other areas, drugs trafficking and border policing – to analyse the destination of illegal drug consignments en route to Scotland from overseas that were intercepted by the UK Border Force (UKBF). We use spatial autocorrelation techniques to identify geographical clusters with higher than expected numbers of drug packages based on population size and other area-based characteristics

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