Severity Of Pot Laws Doesn't Influence Marijuana Use
Santa Cruz,
CA. Neither the severity nor leniency of marijuana laws play a significant
role in influencing patterns or frequency of marijuana use among
experienced users, according to a study published this week in the
American Journal of Public Health.
The study, which
compared the behavior of cannabis users in San Francisco and Amsterdam,
"found consistent similarities in patterns of career use across
different policy contexts," including mean age of onset, frequency
of use, quantity of use, intensity of intoxication, and duration
of career use.
Buying and selling
cannabis are permitted in Amsterdam in licensed "coffee shops,"
and public use is permitted, whereas in San Francisco, buying, selling,
and public use of marijuana for recreational purposes remain criminal
offenses.
"If drug
policies are a potent influence on user behavior, there should not
be such strong similarities across such different drug control regimes,"
authors concluded. "Our findings do not support claims that
criminalization reduces cannabis use [or] that decriminalization
increases cannabis use. Moreover, Dutch decriminalization does not
appear to be associated with greater use of other illicit drugs
relative to drug use in San Francisco, nor does criminalization
in San Francisco appear to be associated with less use of other
illicit drugs relative to their use in Amsterdam. Indeed, to judge
from the lifetime prevalence of other illicit drug use, the reverse
may be the case."
NORML
Foundation Executive Director Allen St. Pierre praised the study's
findings, noting that they mimic similar results commissioned by
the US government which have found no greater use of marijuana in
US states that have decriminalized its use compared to those that
have not. "More than 30 percent of the US population lives
under some form of marijuana decriminalization, and according to
government and academic studies, these laws have not contributed
to an increase in marijuana consumption nor negatively impacted
adolescent attitudes toward drug use," St. Pierre said.
"Enforcing
marijuana prohibition costs taxpayers an estimated $10 billion annually
and results in the arrest of approximately 700,000 individuals per
year. Yet, study after study shows that this enforcement has little-to-no
influence on individuals' behavior. Rather, it is a tremendous waste
of national and state criminal justice resources that should be
focused on combating serious and violent crime. It invites government
unnecessarily into areas of our private lives, and needlessly damages
the lives and careers of hundreds of thousands of otherwise law-abiding
citizens."
For
an abstract of "The Limited Relevance of Drug Policy: Cannabis
in Amsterdam and in San Francisco" click here.