Legalisation Information
It has often been said
that legalisation
would see higher prices and strict controls, but that
is not
the vision of any of the regulation proposals here.
Most say
that to end the illicit market the legal product needs
to be
cheaper than the black market cannabis, and most
contain provision
for individual home grown plants. The Case Studies are
a bit
of history and background. After that are various
proposals
as to how legalisation could be implemented.
This is not
decriminalisation,
but regulation. Decriminalisation preserves the
failings of
prohibition but makes it easier for smokers. That is a
wedge
of Howardly proportions. It is a Clayton's measure.
We have to look beyond
the smoke
and mirrors, the fear and mystification, the rhetoric
and hysteria,
etc and get a clear unemotional view. The issue of
prohibition
is clouded with emotion and it will be difficult to
overcome
that, but it is the only real option.
The temperance dream of
abstinence
through legal prohibition has created a social
nightmare. We
need a rational way to move on. We need a well defined
and articulate
goal.

Background:
Whither.html
People's
Drug Summit 2002
EMCDDA
- Perspectives on cannabis controversies, treatment
and
regulation in Europe.pdf
Case
Studies of
Cannabis Law Reform (WA, NZ & UK)
A bit of drug law history on earlier reform
efforts.
Quote: "As a consequence of the
Commonwealth
Government being a signatory and having ratified each
of the
three UN Conventions a series of complex and varying
laws has
been introduced by each of the Australian
jurisdictions to implement
the minimum requirements of these conventions. There
is little
consistency in the legislation passed by the States
and Territories
as in each jurisdiction drug laws have been driven by
local
factors, measures to counteract and anticipate
emerging local
and national trends and issues involving the use of
cannabis
and other drugs. In addition to separate laws
concerned with
prohibited drugs in each jurisdiction, there is a raft
of complex
Commonwealth, State and Territory laws covering other
matters,
such as confiscation of the proceeds of crime and
money laundering.
344
Because of the interlinked relationship between
domestic and
international debate about reform, discourse about law
reform
in a specific jurisdiction inevitably includes
references to
and acknowledges DLE developments in other
jurisdictions. The
dominance of the UN framework means that reform in one
jurisdiction
are likely to be of significance in other signatory
countries
and an exemplar of how policies may apparently conform
to the
strictures of the UN conventions by adapting to
domestic circumstances
and values. There is also a sequential nature to drug
reform
as innovations and investigations undertaken in one
jurisdiction
tend to he built upon and developed by subsequent
reforms m
other countries.
However, the strictures from the UN drug conventions
have attracted
growing criticism as it has been recognised the
possibilities
for law reform and policy development in jurisdictions
like
WA, NZ and the UK can be constrained by the extent to
which
legislators believe they have to defer to these
conventions.
In practice the majority of jurisdictions have adhered
closely
to the principles embodied in an international
prohibition framework
concerning both naturally occurring drugs (such as
cannabis)
and synthetic drugs.' 345
"There is ... a
North
American bias in both drug policy and drug policy
research.
This bias takes many forms and contains a number of
contradictions.
Global drug policy for instance, is being marketed to
the general
public as an emanation of the global village's'
volonte generale
(general
will), while serious analyses convincingly show,
that it
really rests on a highly coercive consensus
masterminded by
just one international moral entrepreneur: the United
States.
Had it not been for a century of big stick diplomacy,
contemporary
'narcotics control' would display the diversity of
present day
alcohol controls instead of the uniformity of
international
conventions. "
346
It has been argued that the dominance by the US and
the key
UN bodies responsible for implementation of the
various drug
conventions. the INCB and the UN Drug Control Program
(UNDCP).
has meant that policy development in Australia and
other signatory
nations has been substantially hampered.
"Both the UNDCP/INCB and the government of the USA,
have
explicit policies that other nations should apply,
their (prohibitionist)
approaches to drugs in society The provisions of the
international
treaties recognising that legislation and its
enforcement may
reflect the cultures of individual nations is
generally ignored.
In this context it isworrying that many nations have
incorporated
the Conventions into domestic law without critical
examination
of (1) the implications of doing so and (2) the
potential usefulness,
for individual nations, of the provisions which
apparently permit
deviation from total prohibition where this reflects
local cultures."
347
References:
343 Roberts M,
Klien A
& Tace M. Towards a review of global policies
on illegal
drugs. Report One. Beckley Foundation, Drug
Policy Program,
2004.
344 It has been
argued
that the Commonwealth would probably be able to
legislate to
enable it to exclusively cover drug offences In
Australia. Cf:
Brown R. 'Federal drug control laws: present and
future.'
(1977) 8 Federal Law Review 435 452.
345 For a
comprehensive
review of the historical progression In the
development of the
international framework, see Chapter 19 "The
international
legal environment." Volume III in Canada,
Parliament,
Senate. Special Committee on Illegal Drugs. Cannabis:
our position
for a Canadian public policy. (3 Vols). Ottawa.
Canadian
Parliament, 2002.
346 Scheerer S. 'North
American bias and non American roots of cannabis
prohibition.'
In Bollinger L (ed). Cannabis science: From
prohibition to human
right. Frankfurt, Germany. Peter Lang. 1997.
347 McDonald D. A
focus
on the goals of drug policy, not just its form.
Paper presented
at International Symposium Regulating Cannabis:
Options for
control in the 21st century. Regents College, 5th
September
1998.

Arguments
Opposing Prohibition:
Wim
van der Brink "Forum: decriminalization of
cannabis".pdf
Drugs
Are Too Dangerous Not to Regulate: We Should Legalize
Them
Existing
Proposals:
Taxing
the UK Drugs Market.pdf
"The key to maximising excise (tax) revenues is to
keep
the user price low enough to undercut the illicit
market.."
after legalisation, naturally.
Model
for Legalisation (German) pdf
A history of prohibition and a model for
legalisation/regulation.
It is referred to as a "global model" and suggests a
hundred
plants for personal use.
Transform_After_the_War_on_Drugs.pdf
The Transform Drug
Policy
Foundation exists to reduce harm and promote
sustainable
health and wellbeing by bringing about a just,
effective and
humane system to regulate and control drugs at local,
national
and international levels.
"The term 'legalisation' is frequently misunderstood.
Transform
uses a more specific definition; the 'regulation and
control
of the production, supply and use of currently illegal
drugs'
(see definitions p. 17). This implies the repeal of
prohibition
but not its replacement with a free market model of
legalisation
as espoused by some libertarians and free market
economists.
The various regulatory options for legal drug
production and
supply are outlined in this report (see p. 18).
Transform is
not advocating the 'drugs free for all' that some
critics have
suggested; we would argue that such a phrase more
accurately
describes today's criminal drug'markets. Equating
prohibition'
and 'drug control' is one of the great ironies of
social policy
- in reality, prohibition means abdicating control to
gangsters
and unregulated dealers. Legalisation would, by
contrast, put
in place the regulations and controls absent from
existing illegal
markets."
Transform
Tools For The Debate.pdf
This guide is aimed at people in government and civil
society
who understand that prohibition has been disastrously
counter-productive
and appreciate the need for an alternative, but who
lack the
analysis, facts or language tools to engage in the
public debate
with real confidence.
Controlling
Psychoactive
Substances; the Current System and Alternative
Models.pdf
Kings County Bar Association (USA) Drugs Policy
Project Report.
"This report is the product the Legal
Frameworks
Group of the King County Bar Association Drug Policy
Project,
which included the participation of more than two
dozen attorneys
and other professionals, as well as scholars, public
health
experts, state and local legislative staff, current
and former
law enforcement representatives and current and former
elected
officials. The Legal Frameworks Group was established
as an
outgrowth of the work of the Task Force on the Use of
Criminal
Sanctions, which published its own report in 2001
examining
the effectiveness and appropriateness of the use of
criminal
sanctions related to psychoactive drug use.
The Criminal Sanctions Task Force report found that
the continued
arrest, prosecution and incarceration of persons
violating the
drug laws has failed to reduce the chronic societal
problem
of drug abuse and its attendant public and economic
costs. Further,
the Task Force found that toughening drug-related
penalties
has not resulted in enhanced public safety nor has it
deterred
drug-related crime nor reduced recidivism by removing
drug offenders
from the community. The Task Force also chronicled the
numerous
"collateral" effects of current drug policy, including
the erosion of public health, compromises in civil
rights, clogging
of the courts, disproportionately adverse effects of
drug law
enforcement on poor and minority communities,
corruption of
public officials and loss of respect for the law.
Based on those
findings, the Task Force concluded that the use of
criminal
sanctions is an ineffective means to discourage drug
use or
to address the problems arising from drug abuse, and
it is extremely
costly in both financial and human terms, unduly
burdening the
taxpayer and causing more harm to people than the use
of drugs
themselves.
The Legal Frameworks Group, building on the work of
the Criminal
Sanctions Task Force, moved beyond the mere criticism
of the
current drug control regime and set out to lay the
foundation
for the development of a new, state- level regulatory
system
to control psychoactive substances that are currently
produced
and distributed exclusively in illegal markets. The
purposes
of such a system would be to render the illegal
markets in psychoactive
substances unprofitable, to improve restricting access
by young
persons to psychoactive substances and to expand
dramatically
the opportunities for substance abuse treatment in the
community.
Those purposes conform to the primary objectives of
drug policy
reform identified by the King County Bar Association
in 2001:
to reduce crime and public disorder; to enhance public
health;
to protect children better; and to use scarce public
resources
more wisely."
Preventing
Harm From Psychoactive Substance Use.pdf
Vancouver City Council on the 3rd Nov, 2005,
unanimously adopted
"Preventing Harm From Psychoactive Substance Use," a
plan that,
among other things, calls for an end to prohibition
and the
regulated distribution of cannabis. This is presented
from a
"harm minimisation" perspective.
Regulation
of Psychoactive Substances in Canada.pdf
Health Officers Council of British Columbia
"Alternative models to the regulation of
psychoactive
substances are being developed, and focus on changes
to the
supply chain to protect and promote public health.
The models identify the key activities in product
acquisition
as wholesaling, marketing, and distribution, which
link products
to consumers. They look at how these activities exert
strong
influences on producers and retailers, engage in
promotion and
show how the marketing activities may be more of a
problem more
than the substances themselves.
These alternate models challenge the belief that
for-profit
corporations should play a primary role in
psychoactive substance
trade. Since the for-profit corporations are obliged
under law
to act only in the "best interests of shareholders"
by maximising profits, public health considerations
are not
drivers. And because the for-profit model compels the
maintenance
and expansion of sales, to the detriment of health, a
different
type of enterprise with public health as its primary
mandate
could be chosen to provide and control psychoactive
substances.
There are business models such as publicly owned
enterprises,
private non-profit enterprises, cooperatives, or
community interest
companies that could be chosen to manage psychoactive
substances.
These models have been established to meet common
social, economic,
and environmental needs: In Canada, energy, water,
education,
corrections, and health services are predominantly
supplied
by such models.
For example this approach would allow wholesaling,
marketing,
and distribution only through a dedicated agency that
has primarily
a health promotion, protection, and harm minimisation
charter.
The form and contents of, and information about,
substances
would be controlled to minimise harms, manage the
supply in
ways that limit promotions, and provide incentives to
develop
less harmful products."
Nimbin's 2000
Cannabis Cafe Experience
"Regulating
Cannabis: A New Way Forward."
AUSTRALASIAN DRUG STRATEGY CONFERENCE
"Let's Get It Right TOGETHER",
Adelaide
April 1999.
Aspects of
Regulation:
The
Economics of Drug
Legalisation.pdf
If you are an economist you may understand this better
than
most.
Cannabis
Transactions
and Law Reform.pdf
A discussion of the impact of violence or robbery in
cannabis
transactions and relevance to legalisation/regulation
in New
Zealand.
Should
cannabis be taxed and regulated?
"After three-quarters of a century of prohibition,
Australia's
cannabis industry is the same financial size as her
gold industry,
twice the size of her wine industry and three-quarters
the size
of the nation's beer industry [1, 24 June 2000 no.
32]. More
Australians consume cannabis than any other illicit
drug. Of
the 15 million Australians aged 14 years and over, 5.7
million
report having ever used cannabis and 2.6 million
report using
cannabis in the 12 months prior to interview [2].
Criminal sanctions
for people cultivating, selling or consuming cannabis
enjoyed
strong community support for many years. Civil
penalties are
now more generally favoured. One of the major problems
with
either option is the preservation of a criminal supply
source
for an industry with an annual turnover estimated to
be $5 billion
[3], representing 1% of Australia's Gross Domestic
Product."
http://www.beckleyfoundation.org/
The Beckley Foundation is a charitable trust that
promotes the
investigation of consciousness and its modulation from
a multidisciplinary
perspective. The research we support aims to make
significant
theoretical advances that will also help develop
practical applications:
to ameliorate mental illness; comfort the dying; and
enhance
health, creativity and well-being. The mainstay of the
foundation's
work is to direct and support world-class research
into the
practices used to alter our conscious state, and the
policies
that seek to regulate some of these practices. Our
activities
include:
Initiating and directing scientific and policy
research programmes
Hosting high level seminars
Writing academic reports
Creating networks of academics, professionals, and
policymakers
Disseminating information to academics, health
professionals,
policymakers and the public
Maintaining a website which contains all our
publications, as
well as an extensive online library with over 10,000
scientific
papers and articles.
In 2006, our website was selected by the British
Library for
inclusion in its Website Preservation Programme. The
Beckley
Foundation was founded and is directed by Amanda
Feilding, Lady
Neidpath.
Regulation
Hemp
A Hemp Embassy culling of the material above for a
discussion
paper. We are seeking considered comment for a serious
effort
at a credible solution. Email
us with "Regulation Hemp" in the subject line
if you have input.
NIMBIN
HEALTH & MEDICAL
RESEARCH COUNCIL
SAFER CANNABIS USE GUIDELINES
