Foreword by Thomas Schelling
Preface Part I: Cannabis Policy: Moving beyond Stalemate
1. Introduction
2. The Health and Psychological Effects of Cannabis Use Annex :
Health Advice on Cannabis Use
3. The Cannabis Prohibition Regime: Patterns of Use, Markets and
Policies
4. The Range of Reforms within the System: Softening the
Prohibition
5. The Impacts of Cannabis Policy Reforms within the Current Drug
Control Regime
6. Beyond the Current Drug Conventions
7. Paths Forward from the Impasse
Part II: Conclusions and Recommendations
Annex: Research Priorities
Part III: Draft Framework Convention on Cannabis Control
References
About the Authors and the Beckley Foundation
Published in conjunction with Beckley Foundation Press. Convened by Amanda Feilding.
Robin Room grew up in Sydney, Australia and received his higher
education in the U.S., with a PhD in sociology from the University
of California, Berkeley. He was the Scientific Director of the
Alcohol Research Group in Berkeley, a U.S. National Alcohol
Research Center, from 1977 to 1991, and then the Vice-President for
Research at the Addiction Research Foundation of Ontario, Canada,
from 1991 to 1998. In 1999 he was appointed as a professor and the
founding
director of the Centre for Social Research on Alcohol and Drugs at
Stockholm University. Since March, 2006, he has been a Professor in
the School of Population Health of the University of Melbourne and
the
Director of the AER Centre for Alcohol Policy Research at Turning
Point Alcohol and Drug Centre. He has worked on social, cultural
and epidemiological studies of alcohol, drugs and gambling
behaviour and problems, and studies of social responses to alcohol
and drug problems and of the effects of policy changes.
Simon Lenton PhD MPsych(clin) is a Professor and Deputy Director at
the National Drug Research Institute, in Perth Western Australia
where he has worked since 1993. He also works part time as a
Clinical Psychologist in private practice specializing in drug
issues. Simon previously worked in the government alcohol and other
drug sector as a clinical psychologist and manager. His research
interests include bridging the gap between drug policy research and
drug policy practice, illicit drug use
and harm reduction, impact of legislative options for drugs, and
drink and drug driving. He has published more than 30 scientific
articles, book chapters and reports on cannabis, health and the law
and
presented on the topic at numerous national and international
conferences. Peter Reuter is Professor in the School of Public
Policy and in the Department of Criminology at the University of
Maryland. He is Director of the Program on the Economics of Crime
and Justice Policy at the University and also Senior Economist at
RAND.
He founded and directed RAND's Drug Policy Research Center from
1989-1993; the Center is a multi-disciplinary research program
begun in 1989 with funding from a number of foundations. His early
research focused on the organization of illegal markets and
resulted in the publication of Disorganized Crime: The Economics of
the Visible Hand (MIT Pres, 1983), which won the Leslie Wilkins
award as most outstanding book of the year in criminology and
criminal justice. Since 1985 most of his research
has dealt with alternative approaches to controlling drug problems,
both in the United States and Western Europe. Wayne Hall is an
NHMRC Australia Fellow and Professor of Public Health Policy in
the
School of Population Health, University of Queensland. He was
formerly Director of the Office of Public Policy and Ethics at the
Institute for Molecular Bioscience, UQ (2001-2005) and Director of
the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at UNSW (1994-2001).
He has advised the World Health Organization on: the health effects
of cannabis use; the effectiveness of drug substitution treatment;
the scientific quality of the Swiss heroin trials; the contribution
of illicit drug use to the
global burden of disease; and the ethical implications of genetic
and neuroscience research on addiction.. In 2001 he was identified
by the Institute for Scientific Analysis as one of the world's
most
highly cited social scientists in the past 20 years. Benedikt
Fischer, PhD, obtained his doctorate in Criminology at the
University of Toronto (Canada) in 1998. After appointments as a
Research Scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
(CAMH) as well as a faculty member in the Department of Public
Health Sciences and at the Centre of Criminology, University of
Toronto, he joined the newly established Faculty of Health
Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, in 2008.
There, he is a full professor and holds a CIHR/PHAC Research Chair
in Applied Public Health and a Michael Smith Foundation for Health
Research Senior Scholar Award. His research is interdisciplinary
in
nature, and concentrates mainly on substance use and mental health,
infectious diseases, urban/public health, criminal justice,
marginalized populations, interventions and policy. He is widely
published in these areas.
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