Skip to main content

Latest

Chronicle
Chronicle
Blog

New Synthetic Marijuana Products: Are They Medicine?

Recent press coverage about synthetic marijuana products (commonly known as Spice and K2) is unsurprisingly leading more people to try them. Interestingly, the drug is catching on with sick people in Kansas, where medical marijuana remains illegal:

Spice is designed to produce profoundly similar effects to herbal cannabis, so it makes sense that patients are finding it helpful. There's still a lot we don't know about it, but cannabinoid research is generally associated with a number of promising medical applications and it wouldn't surprise me to learn that the drug has something to offer.

At the very least, I'd give more weight to the claims from sick people who say it's helping them than to the claims from police and politicians that say it's potentially deadly.

Update: Uh-oh, it looks like the prohibition effort in Kansas is moving faster than I thought:

— The Senate on Thursday approved a bill that makes illegal the substances in K2 that law officials say produce a marijuana-like high. The legislation now goes to Gov. Mark Parkinson, who has said he supports the ban. [LJWorld.com]

I suppose you can make something illegal pretty fast if you don't waste time on scientific research or rational discussion.

In The Trenches

We need to raise $13,000 by Friday

Dear friends:

When it comes to changing bad marijuana laws, I don’t want to let anything stand in the Marijuana Policy Project’s (MPP’s) way.  Especially not money!  Donate Now, and your gift will be doubled.

In our short 15-year history, the number of medical marijuana states has increased from zero to 14, we’ve helped lay the groundwork for a change in federal law, and set the stage for the first state to tax and regulate marijuana like alcohol, because of your generous support.

As we move closer to achieving our goal — no more marijuana arrests — our budget is straining to keep up with our needs.

Won’t you help us meet our goal of raising $13,000 by Friday, so we can keep all of our projects on target, and so we can take advantage of a wealthy philanthropist’s promise to match the first $2.4 million that MPP can raise from the rest of the planet in 2010?

This means that your donation today will be doubled.  It also means full steam ahead for our projects.  Here's where and how we are spending your donations:

California  Your donations have made a huge impact here, where MPP worked closely with California NORML, DPA, and other advocates to ensure successful hearings and advocacy for A.B. 390, which would legalize, tax, and regulate marijuana. MPP will be working hard to build upon the success of A.B. 390 and to gain further support for taxing and regulating marijuana in the state as citizens prepare to vote on the “Tax Cannabis” initiative.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Arizona   MPP, with your support, is about to successfully finish our signature drive to place a medical marijuana initiative on the November 2010 ballot, which would make the signature drive one of the earliest to be completed in the history of the state.   Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Nevada  With your support, MPP submitted finalized initiative language to the Secretary of State. Three weeks later, we emerged from the 15-day challenge period unchallenged.  This is an indication that opposition to the initiative is not strong within the political establishment.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

South Dakota  Donations from you and other supporters allowed MPP to help draft a medical marijuana initiative for the November 2010 ballot and has been providing guidance to activists on the ground throughout their just-completed signature drive.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Illinois  MPP donors' support helped get Illinois' medical marijuana bill on the House floor, but we have a lot more work to get the 60 votes it needs. The Senate already passed the bill last year, so this could be the year it heads to the governor, who has publicly said he's open to signing it.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

New York  After seven years of lobbying, and thanks to our donors who have stood by us all these years, this may finally be the year that medical marijuana becomes law. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Colorado  MPP put your donations to good use by drafting a constitutional amendment ballot initiative on behalf of local stakeholders, which would guarantee Coloradans the right to cultivate marijuana for patients and to distribute it at dispensaries. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

New Hampshire  Your support helped a bipartisan, MPP-drafted bill to tax and regulate marijuana come very close to passing committee last month -- 8-10, with a ninth supporter not in the room.  Rather than killing the bill, the full House approved the committee's plan to study it, 272-76. Working closely with local partners and other supporters, MPP has led the advocacy both for that bill and for a bill to decriminalize possession of up to one quarter ounce of marijuana, which passed committee 16-2 on February 11.   Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Iowa  As a result of a lawsuit filed by an Iowa advocate, the state Board of Pharmacy held a series of hearings on whether to reschedule marijuana’s legal classification. With your support, MPP helped mobilize patients, physicians, researchers, and local advocates to speak out, and just last week the board recommended rescheduling marijuana and setting up a task force to recommend a medical marijuana access program. Help us keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Massachusetts  Our team used your donations wisely to build support for medical marijuana legislation in the health and medical community, securing support from four sheriffs, and building support among key legislators. MPP is working closely with patients, physicians, and local advocates to show legislators how strong support is for the issue.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Rhode Island  MPP has invested your donations wisely to educate a study commission on marijuana prohibition about what a miserable failure prohibition has been. MPP and local allies are hopeful about the prospects of a bill to decriminalize up to an ounce of marijuana. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Washington, D.C.  Whatever happens in the nation’s capital is highly visible across the nation and to our lawmakers, so any donations we invest in our work here is reflected across the nation. MPP has been working with other allied organizations and the D.C. City Council to make sure D.C.'s medical marijuana law is implemented responsibly and in a manner that is true to voters' intent. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Delaware  Now that the legislature has reconvened, MPP's medical marijuana bill, which includes nonprofit dispensaries, will pick up where we left off in June -- on the Senate floor after having passed committee in a 4-0 vote. We've also picked up a new Republican cosponsor.  Your support made this possible.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Maryland  Your donations are financing our efforts, combined with MD Safe Access, and other allies, at encouraging the legislature to improve Maryland's medical marijuana law, which currently only reduces the penalty for possession to a $100 fine in case of medical necessity, and does not protect from arrest or criminal conviction, or provide for access. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Vermont  MPP's lobbyist and organizer are using your support to build support for twin decriminalization bills that carried over from 2009. MPP’s team qualified a non-binding referendum on decriminalization for the March 2 town meeting day in Montpelier, the state capital. At the same time, our team is working with patients, physicians, and pharmacists to enact a bill adding dispensaries to the state’s medical marijuana law.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Minnesota  After a lobbying effort backed by your support helped MPP guide a medical marijuana bill through the legislature last year, it was vetoed by Gov. Pawlenty. MPP is now launching a campaign to make sure the next governor signs a bill.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Pennsylvania  Thanks to your generous support, MPP was able to travel to Harrisburg to testify, along with a strong lineup of witnesses, on the first medical marijuana bill to be introduced there in recent memory. Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Federal  Because your support finances lobbying, the best way to change laws, our lobbying team can focus on building a coalition of participants from across the political spectrum who will urge Congress to end marijuana prohibition.  We're also working to follow up on our victory with the Justice Department guidelines by pushing for legislation that would protect patients in all 50 states.  Keep up the momentum.  Donate Now.

Getting the best results from every dollar — that’s how we treat your donations.

Won’t you please help us raise $13,000 by Friday by donating now?  Your donation will keep our projects on track and bring us closer to the day we can proclaim, No More Marijuana Arrests.  And, your donation will be matched by a wealthy philanthropist who promised to match the first $2.4 million that MPP can raise from the rest of the planet in 2010. 

Sincerely,

Marsha Wallen NA_022310_A

Marsha Wallen
Membership Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.
In The Trenches

Tell the President: Don't Just Say It. Do It!

You Can Make a Difference

 

Dear friends,

Tell the president:  We need a new direction for U.S. drug policy, not the status quo. 

Take Action
Email the President

President Obama is saying all the right things when it comes to drug policy reform, but not enough has changed since he took office.

You and I need to show President Obama that we won't stand for the status quo on drug policy.

After a promising start on drug policy issues, the Obama administration has gone astray.  The president’s proposed drug war budget looks a whole lot like the Bush administration’s drug war budget, with funding for failed enforcement policies far outweighing funding for treatment.

Tell the Obama administration you’re tired of Bush-era drug policy and ready for some change you can believe in!

Last month, President Obama nominated an anti-reform Bush holdover to head the DEA.  Under the Bush administration, nominee Michele Leonhart coordinated numerous medical marijuana raids and stood in the way of scientific research.  A new drug policy requires new leadership, especially when the nominee was so closely associated with the failed policies of the past.

The president has repeatedly said that science, not politics, should guide drug policy, and his drug czar called for an end to the war on drugs.  The Obama administration isn’t spouting drug war rhetoric, but it hasn’t abandoned drug war policies either.

Write to the president and urge him to deliver on his promise to improve U.S. drug policy.

Sincerely,

Bill Piper
Director, Office of National Affairs
Drug Policy Alliance Network

 

In The Trenches

ALERT: #434 The International Narcotics Control Board On Cannabis

THE INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL BOARD ON CANNABIS ********************************************************************** DrugSense FOCUS Alert #434 - Thursday, 25 February 2010 Today major newspapers across Canada printed articles with headlines like 'Strengthen Medical Marijuana Laws, UN Drug Watchdog Warns' which appeared in the National Post: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n140.a11.html The key paragraph from the article states "The Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board said Canada is operating outside international treaty rules aimed at minimizing the risk criminals will get hold of cannabis grown under the program." The Board has only the power to encourage governments to act in accordance with the United Nations Conventions on Narcotic Drugs. Governments are free to express their sovereignty as their laws allow. The media is more often than not clueless about this. Understanding this may help you to counter the issues raised in your letters to the editor and your other efforts in support of marijuana law reform. MAP's news clippings are updated a few times each day at http://www.drugnews.org/ Some may touch on this issue, but many will not. Most clippings are worthy of consideration for your letter to the editor writing efforts. ********************************************************************** The Board's report is at http://www.incb.org/incb/en/annual-report-2009.html and Chapter III, Americas is at http://mapinc.org/url/8FhqCC7M. The paragraph about the United States and cannabis is below. 400. While the consumption and cultivation of cannabis, except for scientific purposes, are illegal activities according to federal law in the United States, several states have enacted laws that provide for the "medical use" of cannabis.41 The control measures applied in those states for the cultivation of cannabis plants and the production, distribution and use of cannabis fall short of the control requirements laid down in the 1961 Convention. The Board is deeply concerned that those insufficient control provisions have contributed substantially to the increase in illicit cultivation and abuse of cannabis in the United States. In addition, that development sends a wrong message to other countries. The Board welcomes the reaffirmation by the Government of the United States that cannabis continues to be considered a dangerous drug. The Government has also underscored that it is the responsibility of the Food and Drug Administration to approve all medicines in the United States. The Board notes with appreciation that the Government, following new guidelines on prosecution, which stipulate that activities should not focus on individuals who comply with "medical" cannabis regulations in states, has confirmed that it has no intention to legalize cannabis. The Board is concerned over the ongoing discussion in several states on legalizing and taxing the "recreational" use of cannabis, which would be a serious contravention of the 1961 Convention. The Board emphasizes that it is the responsibility of the Government of the United States to fully implement the provisions of the 1961 Convention with respect to all narcotic drugs, including cannabis (see paragraphs 61-64 above). ********************************************************************** Suggestions for Writing LTEs Are at Our Media Activism Center http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides ********************************************************************** Prepared by: Richard Lake, Senior Editor www.mapinc.org === DrugSense provides many services at no charge, but they are not free to produce. Your contributions make DrugSense and its Media Awareness Project (MAP) happen. Please donate today. Our secure Web server at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm accepts credit cards and Paypal. Or, mail your check or money order to: DrugSense 14252 Culver Drive #328 Irvine, CA 92604-0326. (800) 266 5759 DrugSense is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising awareness about the expensive, ineffective, and destructive "War on Drugs." Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.
In The Trenches

U.S.-Mexico Drug Summit Fails to Acknowledge Obvious Solution to Violent Drug Cartels

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                                                 

FEBRUARY 25, 2010

U.S.-Mexico Drug Summit Fails to Acknowledge Obvious Solution to Violent Drug Cartels

Ending Marijuana Prohibition Would Deal Crucial Blow to Mexican Drug Cartels, Drastically Reduce Border Violence

CONTACT: Aaron Houston, MPP director of government relations …………… 202-420-1031

WASHINGTON, DC — Today, high-ranking officials from the United States and Mexico concluded a three-day conference meant to outline ways the two nations could reduce the illicit drug trade-associated violence that continues to plague the U.S.-Mexican border. Unfortunately, officials concluded their talks without making any reference to the most sensible and guaranteed strategy for reducing that violence: removing marijuana from the criminal market, and depriving drug cartels of their main source of income and strife.

         “The only solution to the current crisis is to tax and regulate marijuana,” said Aaron Houston, director of government relations for the Marijuana Policy Project. “Once again, Mexican and U.S. officials are ignoring the fact that the cartels get 70 percent of their profits from marijuana. It’s time to face the reality that the U.S.’s marijuana prohibition is fueling a bloodbath in Mexico and the United States.” 

         The Obama administration has said it will provide the Mexican government with a $1.4 billion aid package to combat the Mexican drug cartels, in addition to seeking $310 million in its 2011 budget for drug enforcement aid to Mexico. 

         “It is illogical, at best, to continue throwing money at this failed policy,” Houston said. “The government will never eliminate the demand for marijuana, but it can put an end to the monopoly drug cartels currently hold on America’s largest cash crop. Lifting marijuana prohibition would take away the cartels’ largest source of income and the main reason for the horrifically brutal violence perpetrated by rival drug groups.”  

         Last year, the Mexican border city Juarez recorded 2,670 homicides. Among the growing numbers of voices calling for an end to marijuana prohibition in order to stem the violence are former Mexican presidents Vicente Fox and Ernesto Zedillo, as well as the former leaders of Brazil and Colombia.

         With more than 124,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol. For more information, please visit www.mpp.org.

####

In The Trenches

Locations Set for Statewide Trainings

Locations for Statewide Trainings-- this Week!

 

 

Please note that locations have been set for these upcoming, vital trainings in Denver, Grand Junction, and Colorado Springs.  Please check our website for updates on the Ft. Collins location.

(Training Descriptions pasted below schedule)

SCHEDULE
Friday February 26th (Denver)
4:00-6:00p  Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting

 

Location

Local Product of Colorado

1260 22nd Street

Denver, CO 80205
Saturday February 27th (Grand Junction)
4:00-6:00p  Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting

 

Location

God's Gift Dispensary

571 32 Road

Clifton, CO 81520
Sunday February 28th (Colorado Springs)
4:00-6:00p   Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p   Emergency Response Community Meeting

 

Location

Cannabis Therapeutics

957 East Fillmore St.

Colorado Springs, CO 80907
Monday March 1st (Ft. Collins)
4:00-6:00p   Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting
 

Location

TBA

Please check www.sensiblecolorado.org as the event approaches

 

Community Response Meeting:
This FREE meeting is open to all community members that want to participate in a coordinated response during and after raids. During this meeting, we will create a step-by-step community response to raids (rallies, protests, media, alert system), assign roles and tasks, and create a mechanism for ongoing outreach for community support.

Raid Preparedness Training:
This training will walk dispensary staff through protocols that they can have in place to make any law enforcement encounter as successful as possible.  Being ready can help keep a bad situation from getting worse - and it may keep staff and patients out of jail. Participants learn how to prepare in advance, how to stay safe when the police show up, and what may happen afterwards. This cutting edge training includes role plays and tools to create an effect raid plan at your dispensary.  (There is a $50 per person fee that will be collected on-site at the training)

These trainings will be led by national experts from Americans for Safe Access.

Blog

Opponents of Medical Marijuana Should Just Give Up

This month has brought some of the most high-profile backlash we've seen since Obama's new medical marijuana policy took effect. DEA raids of a grower and two laboratories in Colorado as well as an escalating campaign by the Los Angeles DA to completely prohibit sales on his turf have again raised the stakes in a debate that many believed was almost over.

Given the rich history of obstructionism and demagoguery we've learned to expect from hard-line drug warriors, none of this is terribly surprising. But in light of the current political climate, it's really rather unclear what the opposition's gameplan is. Who's calling the shots? What's their motive? How do they expect this to play out? Having lost one public battle after another, it seems the anti-medical marijuana crusaders would want to perform some sort of cost/benefit analysis before wading once again into the political waters where they've been slowly drowning for a decade now.

Does the DEA really want to defend raiding laboratories that do nothing but test cannabis for harmful impurities? What law-enforcement interest is served by this? They tried to frame it as an administrative matter necessitated by the lab's formal permit application, but they sure as hell didn't make an appointment before crashing in there. Maybe they're more interested in the clients than the lab itself, but even if you had a database of every medical grower in the state, what would you do with it? Arresting even one of them is a political minefield.

Similarly, Los Angeles DA Steve Cooley's efforts to ban sales are so far out of step with everything around him that it's just impossible to guess what he hopes to accomplish. Even Attorney General Brown's guidelines explicitly permit distribution and there's no question at all where the people of California stand on this. Cooley is playing with fire here and he should really get a hold of himself before his madness becomes Exhibit A for the full-legalization campaign that's hitting the ballot in California this Fall.

Under Bush, I tended to assume that periodic raids and harassment were a political strategy aimed at confusing legislators in prospective medical marijuana states, but the new DOJ policy preemptively nullifies whatever dubious value that tactic may have had. Presently, it seems that medical marijuana's most impassioned enemies are at war with an inevitable reality. This isn't going to go away because nobody wants that except you. A career in law-enforcement offers many opportunities to be a hero, but this isn’t one of them.
Blog
In The Trenches

RAID RESPONSE: Trainings this week


RAID RESPONSE:  Trainings around the state this week

 

 Sensible Colorado is excited to welcome national experts from Americans for Safe Access (ASA) to Colorado to lead a number of important trainings this week.


See the workshop schedule below.
In response to recent raid activity, ASA Executive Director Steph Sherer and ASA CA Director Don Duncan will host special dispensary staff trainings and community response meetings.

Community Response Meeting:
This FREE meeting is open to all community members that want to participate in a coordinated response during and after raids. During this meeting, we will create a step-by-step community response to raids (rallies, protests, media, alert system), assign roles and tasks, and create a mechanism for ongoing outreach for community support.

Raid Preparedness Training:
This training will walk dispensary staff through protocols that they can have in place to make any law enforcement encounter as successful as possible.


Being ready can help keep a bad situation from getting worse - and it may keep staff and patients out of jail. Participants learn how to prepare in advance, how to stay safe when the police show up, and what may happen afterwards. This cutting edge training includes role plays and tools to create an effect raid plan at your dispensary.  (There is a $50 per person fee that will be collected onsite at the training)
Mark your calendar!  We will send out more specifics later this week.
 

Friday February 26th (Denver)
4:00-6:00p  Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting
 

Saturday February 27th (Grand Junction)
4:00-6:00p  Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting
 

Sunday February 28th (Colorado Springs)
4:00-6:00p   Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting
 

Monday March 1st (Ft. Collins)
4:00-6:00p   Raid Preparedness Training
7:00-9:00p  Emergency Response Community Meeting

Also, thanks to all our supporters that attended the protest during President Obama'a visit last week.  See a picture of the action here.

Blog

War on Drugs Pales in Comparison to Legalized Health Care Industry

In 1971, the American government took its first step in the War on Drugs when President Richard Nixon declared the beginning of what would become a four-decade battle. Since then, according to Esquire Magazine, its costs have ballooned to $52.3 billion dollars in taxpayer funds and 15,223 dead in 2009 alone. But the truly egregious fact is that the government, on one hand, punishes offenders for minor offenses, yet sanctions and encourages the $291 billion dollar prescription drug industry because it is backed by powerful lobbyists on K Street. Deadly Combination
photo credit: RESchroeder The situation has become so sordid that almost 50 million Americans are uninsured, according to health insurance provider, "Affordable Health Insurance." These Americans are growing quickly as a result of the economic malaise of 2008-2009, and because they pay inflated prices for government-sanctioned drugs they've opted not to pay the equally inflated premiums for health plans with prescription coverage. It's time for Congress to act and stop the untrammeled, exponential growth in drug costs by ending the War on Drugs and legalizing certain non-debilitating and clinically proven drugs on the free market. After all, a free market will ensure lower prices for all, lower health care costs, and a better quality of life.
In The Trenches

Drug Truth 02/22/10

Cultural Baggage * Century of Lies * 4:20 Drug War NEWS Cultural Baggage for 02/21/10 29:00 Casper Leitch, host of Time4Hemp invites DTN host Dean Becker as guest, Abolitionist's Moment & Request for Respondents to Pain Killer Survey LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2787 TRANSCRIPT: ASAP Century of Lies for 02/21/10 29:00 Dr. Rick Doblin, Pres. of Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies + Keith Stroup of NORML from Time4Hemp program LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2788 TRANSCRIPT: ASAP 4:20 Drug War NEWS, 02/22 to 02/28/10 Link at www.drugtruth.net on the right margin - Sun - Dr. Rick Doblin re K2 the synthetic marijuana Sat - Dr. Rick Doblin, Pres. of Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies Fri - Dean Becker guests on Time4Hemp 2/2 Thu - Casper Leitch, host of Time4Hemp invites DTN host Dean Becker as guest Wed - Drug War Pissing Contest Winner/Loser Tue - Advice from Dr. Hochman + Request for Respondents to Pain Killer Survey Mon - Abolitionist's Moment & American Dream Programs produced at Pacifica Radio Station KPFT in Houston, 90.1 FM. You can Listen Live Online at www.kpft.org - Cultural Baggage Sun, 7:30 PM ET, 6:30 PM CT, 5:30 PM MT, 4:30 PM PT (Followed Immediately By Century of Lies) - Century of Lies, SUN, 8 PM ET, 7 PM CT, 6 PM MT & 5 PM PT Who's Next to "Face The Inquisition?": Richard Lee, founder of Oaksterdam University Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, www.audioport.org We have potcasts, searchability, CMS, XML, sorts by guest name and by organization. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates i You can tune into both our 1/2 hour programs, live, at 6:30 central time on Pacifica's KPFT at http://www.kpft.org and call in your questions and concerns toll free at 1-877-9-420 420. The two, 29:00 shows appear along with the seven, daily, 3:00 "4:20 Drug War NEWS" reports each Monday morning at http://www.drugtruth.net . We currently have 72 affiliated, yet independent broadcast stations. With a simple email request to [email protected] , your station can join the Drug Truth Network, free of charge. Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, DTN Producer, 713-462-7981, www.drugtruth.net
In The Trenches

US Launch of "Cannabis Policy: Moving Beyond Stalemate"

NEW STUDY REVEALS FAILURE OF US NARCOTICS POLICY THE BECKLEY FOUNDATION ISSUES NEW BOOK “CANNABIS POLICY: MOVING BEYOND STALEMATE” CALLING FOR CHANGE IN THE PROHIBITIONIST MODEL Oxford University Press, February 2010 – An international team of the world's leading drug policy analysts convened by Amanda Feilding, Director of the Beckley Foundation, have written a book analyzing cannabis prohibition policies. Their conclusion is that criminalization has failed to reduce consumption. The book also shows no link between prevalence and cannabis policy – be it liberal or draconian. Cannabis has become widely used and prohibition policies as implemented have only proven to be expensive, intrusive on individual privacy, and socially divisive. The book outlines a full spectrum of alternative policies from depenalization to a fully regulated legal market. Half a century of prohibition has failed to prevent a rise in global cannabis use, which has transformed consumption from a relatively rare behavior confined to a scattering of cultures and countries to almost a rite of passage amongst the Western world’s youth. Prohibition has led to the development of large scale criminal markets that increase the harms of cannabis use and undermine social order. Moreover, a criminal justice approach to cannabis control causes considerable social harms and facilitates discriminatory enforcement against the young and ethnic minorities. “This book clearly shows that prohibitionist policies have not only failed to meet their objectives but have inflicted significant social harms,” says Amanda Feilding Director of the Beckley Foundation. “Efforts to change the current system have been met with stiff resistance from such leading countries as the United States, which is in the company of countries like Russia, China and Sudan.” Criminalisation has not acted as a deterrent, whereas, with a regulated market, the product could be labeled for strength and chemical composition, thereby making it safer. Government could also control and tax its sale, which would provide extra funding for education and treatment. The book is calling for a significant change by adopting a less punitive approach. Countries like the Netherlands and Portugal that have pursued liberal drug policies have not seen consequent increase in cannabis consumption, as staunch prohibitionists argued it would. Instead these countries have experienced reductions in the financial costs associated with criminalization policies, and have reduced the adverse social consequences arising from criminalization strategies. While a number of U.S. states[1] have downgraded the criminal status of marijuana possession offences, and in some cases passed medicinal marijuana exceptions[2], US Federal law severely limits the options most states have to change their drug policies. As states such as California and Colorado seek to develop regulations and tax models for marijuana, policymakers should closely analyze, evaluate and draw inspiration from similar systems and models developed in other countries as described in the book. “The real value of the research we have conducted lies in the breadth of the review of experiences around the globe. It shows the range of different options - local, regional, and national - government can take to reduce the adverse effects of prohibition,” explained Peter Reuter, Director, Program on the Economics of Crime and Justice Policy at the University of Maryland and one of book’s five co-authors. “It is finally time for governments around the world to readdress cannabis policy and to avoid approaches that have been proven to fail.” This month Robin Room, one of the authors, Peter Reuter and Amanda Feilding will be making their case to political leaders in Washington DC, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. The Beckley Foundation is a charitable trust founded in 1998 by Amanda Feilding, Lady Neidpath. It aims at investigating consciousness and its changing states from a multidisciplinary perspective. Through its Science Programme the Foundation initiates, develops and conducts world-class research that will improve our scientific understanding of consciousness and provide practical information to help optimize health and well being. The Foundation also conducts a Drug Policy Program and is dedicated to providing a rigorous, independent review of global drug policy, aiming at reducing the harms associated with both the misuse of drugs and the policies that aim to control them. The intention of the Foundation is to help develop policies that are evidence-based and rational, rather than those that are ineffectual, due to being rooted in unsubstantiated ideology. CONTRIBUTORS Robin Room is a sociologist and Professor at the School of Population Health, University of Melbourne and is the director of the Centre for Alcohol Policy Research. He is also a professor at and was the founding director of the Centre for Social Research on Alcohol and Drugs at Stockholm University. Benedikt Fischer is Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences and the School of Criminology, as well as Interim Director of the Centre for Applied Research in Addictions and Mental Health (CARMHA), at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, where he also currently holds a CIHR/PHAC Research Chair in Applied Public Health and is a MSFHR Senior Scholar Career Investigator. Wayne Hall is a Professor of Public Health Policy at the School of Population Health, University of Queensland. He has advised the World Health Organization on the health effects of cannabis use and other illicit drug related health issues. Peter Reuter is an economist, Senior Economist at RAND and is a Professor at the School of Public Policy and in the Department of Criminology at the University of Maryland. He has served as a consultant to numerous US, European, and UN agencies and founded and directed RAND's multidisciplinary Drug Policy Research Center from 1989-1993. Simon Lenton is a Professor and Deputy Director at the National Drug Research Institute, Perth, Western Australia, and he works as a Clinical Psychologist in private practice. Amanda Feilding is the founder and director of the Beckley Foundation. The Foundation has produced over 35 much-cited academic reports, proceedings documents and briefing papers on key drug policy questions.