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Don't make a hash of it! A thematic review of the literature relating to outcomes of cannabis regulatory change

Journal

DRUGS-EDUCATION PREVENTION AND POLICY
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 439-450

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09687637.2021.1901855

Keywords

Marijuana; cannabis; legislation; regulation; implementation

Funding

  1. Health Research Council of New Zealand [18/002, 20/057]

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Globally cannabis regulations are changing rapidly due to social and political pressure, rather than scientific evidence driving the change. Experience from jurisdictions that have implemented regulatory change should inform future policy development. This review explores underlying themes from literature on the effects of regulatory change related to cannabis.
Globally cannabis regulations are rapidly changing. In recent years social and political pressure, not science, has driven this change. Experience from jurisdictions that have implemented regulatory change, although relatively new, should be used to inform future policy development for other jurisdictions, assisting in addressing the wicked problem that cannabis regulations present. This review aimed to elicit underlying themes from a broad range of literature exploring the effects of regulatory change relating to cannabis. To achieve this a meta-narrative theoretical approach using inductive constant comparative analysis was used to synthesize data until thematic saturation was reached. Following a systematic literature search, 92 papers were analyzed before thematic saturation was complete. Five super-ordinate themes emerged that observed the societal and health effects following legislative and regulatory change: Normalization; Economics; Gatekeeping; Community and Health. These themes, empirically derived through a formal qualitative approach, were considered regarding cultural contexts, providing an understanding of how cannabis regulation is changing the social landscape. Consideration of the themes during future research may provide a focus point for the discussion of legislation and policy, not only relating to cannabis, but also other broad-ranging areas such as social policy, welfare, education and health.

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