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Canadians in favour of relaxing pot laws: poll
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians are open to the idea of decriminalizing or legalizing marijuana, according to the results of a new poll
The Vancouver Sun (Canada)
Tuesday, January 17, 2012The results come as the Liberal party voted overwhelmingly to support legalization of the drug at its biennial policy convention on the weekend, seeming to put the party on side with public opinion. Forty per cent of respondents to the Forum Research poll said they were in favour of the legalization and taxation of pot, while another 26 per cent said they were for the decriminalization of carrying small amounts of the drug. (See also: Majority of Canadians support legalizing or decriminalizing marijuana, new poll suggests)
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Back to Business as Usual as Peru Loses Progressive Drug Czar
Hannah StoneIn Sight
Sunday, January 15, 2012Despite promising signs that Peru’s new president was ready to take a fresh approach to drug policy, focused on attacking traffickers and not coca farmers, his unorthodox top drug official has resigned and been replaced with a more Washington-friendly choice. Ricardo Soberon’s appointment as head of national anti-drug agency Devida was viewed by many as a sign that newly-appointed President Ollanta Humala planned to reform Peru’s anti-narcotics policy. Soberon's proposed policies involved moving away from attacking coca growers.
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Rick Ross, '80s Crack Kingpin, Would Rather Have Sold Pot
Ryan GrimThe Huffington Post (US)
Wednesday, January 11, 2012A leading distributor of crack cocaine in the 1980s would have preferred to have been a pot dealer, but was unable to find enough supply, he told The Huffington Post in an interview. "I wanted to sell pot. You couldn't get pot at a decent price -- I couldn't, nor the quantity," said Rick Ross, whose operation the Los Angeles Times dubbed "the Wal-Mart of crack dealing." Ross built one of the largest cocaine empires in the country. If the goal of U.S. drug policy is to lower demand by increasing price, Reagan's drug war did precisely the opposite, driving people away from pot and toward coke and crack.
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The neuroscience of pot
Researchers Explain Why Marijuana May Bring Serenity Or Psychosis
Alice G. WaltonForbes (US)
Wednesday, January 11, 2012Marijuana has been shown to have both anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) effects and to induce anxiety and psychosis in certain people. In schizophrenics, it can increase symptoms, and in healthy people it can increase the risk of schizophrenia. Now, new study shows that the two active ingredients in pot, ?9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) may have quite opposite effects on the brain – and behavior – and could explain why pot’s effects can be unpredictable.
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Peru replaces drug czar who de-emphasized coca plant eradication, saying it hurt poor growers
The Washington Post (US)
Tuesday, January 10, 2012Peru’s government on Tuesday replaced its drug czar, whose refusal to endorse an all-out coca crop eradication effort put him at odds with the Cabinet chief and prompted concern by the U.S. Embassy. Ricardo Soberon’s resignation came after just five months in office. He caused a stir in August by temporarily suspending manual eradication of Peru’s coca crop.
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Drugs bill goes to Parliament
Legislation to decriminalize personal use but is tougher on those manufacturing and dealing in narcotics
E Kathimerini (Greece)
Monday, January 9, 2012Draft legislation that foresees the decriminalization of the possession of small quantities of drugs for personal use but the leveling of criminal charges against individuals caught growing or manufacturing drugs or using them in public was submitted in Parliament in Greece. The bill is part of a broader initiative aimed at decongesting Greece’s jails, many of which are filled to beyond double their capacity. (See also: Drug law reform in Greece)
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Many US communities are blocking medical marijuana
More and more states are saying yes to medical marijuana. But local governments are increasingly using their laws to just say no, not in our backyard
The Associated Press
Monday, January 9, 2012In California, with the nation's most permissive medical marijuana laws, 185 cities and counties have banned pot dispensaries entirely. In New Jersey, perhaps the most restrictive of the 17 states that have legalized marijuana for sick people, some groups planning to sell cannabis are struggling to find local governments willing to let them in. Dispensaries have also been banned in parts of Colorado and have run into opposition in some towns in Maine.
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How well do international drug conventions protect public health?
Robin Room & Peter ReuterThe Lancet
Volume 379, Issue 9810, pp. 84 - 91
January 7, 2011The Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs in 1961 aimed to eliminate the illicit production and non-medical use of cannabis, cocaine, and opioids, an aim later extended to many pharmaceutical drugs. Over the past 50 years international drug treaties have neither prevented the globalisation of the illicit production and non-medical use of these drugs, nor, outside of developed countries, made these drugs adequately available for medical use. The system has also arguably worsened the human health and wellbeing of drug users by increasing the number of drug users imprisoned, discouraging effective countermeasures to the spread of HIV by injecting drug users, and creating an environment conducive to the violation of drug users' human rights. The international treaties have constrained national policy experimentation because they require nation states to criminalise drug use. The adoption of national policies that are more aligned with the risks of different drugs and the effectiveness of controls will require the amendment of existing treaties, the formulation of new treaties, or withdrawal of states from existing treaties and re-accession with reservations.
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Towards a smarter drugs policy
US drugs debate is dominated by a Manichean divide between prohibitionists and liberalisers, obscuring real scientific solutions
Keith Humphreys and Jonathan CaulkinsThe Guardian (UK)
Friday, January 6, 2011The loudest voices in US drug policy debates call either for enforcing prohibition with ever-increasing ferocity or for giving up altogether by letting corporations legally sell the currently illicit drugs much as they do tobacco and alcohol. But as our colleagues and we detail this week in the Lancet, there is an alternative: adopting drug policies with scientific evidence of effectiveness. Regardless of what goals for drug policy emerge from the democratic process, everyone wants the policies implemented in the service of those goals to be effective.
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Marijuana may both trigger and suppress psychosis
Time Magazine (US)
Thursday, January 5, 2012New research finds that the two main ingredients in marijuana have opposing effects on it. The study examined 15 normal men who had previously smoked cannabis only a few times. Researchers exposed the men to each of the two most psychoactive ingredients in marijuana — delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) and compared their effects with those of a placebo while the participants performed a mental task.
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