Fr. 180.00

Visions of Cannabis Control

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Visions of Cannabis Control documents the history of cannabis policy, and the role of racism, labelling, and stigmatization. It examines the failure to properly frame cannabis prohibition as the result of moral panics and concludes that to sustain reform those affected by cannabis policies must be consulted, respected, and included.

List of contents










  • Part 1 - Moral Renegotiation, Labelling and Moral Panics

  • 1: Cannabis, Criminology, and Visions of Control

  • 2: Criminalization, Stigma, and Normalization

  • 3: Cannabis and the Life Span of Moral Panics

  • Part II - Legal Renegotiation, Regulation, and Research

  • 4: Regulatory Models of Cannabis Policy

  • 5: Stan Cohen and the Limits of the Cannabis Revolution

  • 6: Three Eras of Cannabis Research: An International Review

  • Part III - Cultural Renegotiation and Barriers to Regulation

  • 7: Cannabis Policy, Harm Reduction, and Meaningful Decriminalization

  • 8: Legalization, Polymorphic Governance, and Barriers to Cannabis Policy

  • 9: Cannabis, Culture, and Pragmatic Criminology



About the author

Jon Heidt is an Associate Professor of Criminology at the University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford, British Columbia. He is also an associate of the International Centre for Criminal Law Reform and Criminal Justice Policy and has served as a program evaluator and principal investigator on research projects with Public Safety Canada. He has co-authored several books including Understanding and Youth Crime Prevention and Sports (with Yvon Dandurand), and Cannabis Criminology (with Johannes Wheeldon). His work has also appeared in a variety of academic journals including Deviant Behavior and the Journal of Criminal Justice.

Johannes Wheeldon has more than 20 years of experience working in criminal justice, including teaching in prisons, working with those deemed at high risk to re-offend, and designing, conducting, and managing justice reform projects worldwide. He has worked with the American Bar Association, the Canadian International Development Agency, the Open Society Foundations, and the World Bank. Wheeldon has published six books and more than 30 peer-reviewed papers. In 2022, he edited: Visual Criminology: From History and Methods to Critique and Policy, published by Routledge. He has also co-authored Cannabis Criminology with Jon Heidt.

Summary

Visions of Cannabis Control argues that cannabis prohibition is the result of moral panic that has been instigated, perpetuated, and sustained in ways that are difficult to dislodge. The book documents the history of these cannabis policies and explores the impact of issues such as racism, labelling, and stigmatization.

Stan Cohen argued that reforms designed to replace carceral tendencies within correctional institutions can instead extend such approaches into our communities. The idea that criminal justice reforms often reproduce what they were intended to disrupt can be applied to the cannabis revolution currently underway around the world. Racial disparities in arrests persist, exacerbated by laws that make it legal to possess cannabis but illegal to consume it anywhere but in your home. In this book, the authors argue that too often, cannabis liberalization comes at the cost of expanding paternalistic public health models and abstention-based diversion programs. The goal of dismantling and disrupting illicit markets has undermined onerous regulations, anaemic marketing efforts, and failure to promote consumer-centred approaches. Emphasizing public health goals ahead of market conditions complicates legal cannabis as an industry.

To understand the future of cannabis policy, Visions of Cannabis Control examines the experience of six countries and several US states through the lens of criminological theory, recent research, and practice. The book presents several solutions for responsible regulation concluding that sustaining reform will require a more inclusive approach ensuring those affected by cannabis policies are consulted, respected, and involved.

Additional text

The authors propose an enlightened regulatory approach informed by cannabis consumer culture and grounded in the principles of harm reduction and continued research.

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