Cannabis Policy: Moving Beyond Stalemate
CARMHA's Interim Director and SFU Professor Benedikt Fischer co-author of new book just released on January 21, 2010
Cannabis, marijuana, pot, ganja – it goes by many names – is by far the
most widely used illegal substance, and accounts for more arrests than
any other drug. Politicians the world over have tied themselves in
knots trying to decide how to deal with it.
Cannabis Policy: Moving Beyond Stalemate
is unique in providing the materials needed for deciding on policy
about cannabis, and will be of interest to a wide range of readers
interested in drugs and drug policy. It reviews the state of knowledge
on the health and psychological effects of cannabis, and its
dangerousness relative to other drugs, legal and illegal. It considers
patters of use, the size of illicit markets and the effects of attempts
to enforce a global prohibition. It examines countries that have tried
reforming their regimes and softening prohibition and evaluates the
effects of such changes on cannabis usage, drug markets, and in
mitigating the adverse consequences of prohibition. For policy makers
willing to look outside the box of the global prohibition regime, the
book examines the options and possibilities for a country or group of
countries to bring about change in, or opt out of, the global control
system.
Authors:
Robin Room, Benedikt Fischer, Wayne Hall, Simon Lenton, Peter Reuter
