Alcohol
Cannabis (Rec)
Laws
International Policy
Cannabis (Med)
100

Prohibition:

1. What amendment started

2. What amendment ended

3. Effect on organized crime


1. 18th amendment, Jan 20 1920

2. 21st amendment, Dec 5 1933

3. increased org. crime- more organized and profitable


100

Colorado's commercialization in 2014 effects

1. 18 billion dollars of weed sold

2. 3.1 billion dollars of tax revenue

3. use by teens has not increased

4. heavy users buy the most: 22% of users buy 67% of sales

100

Racial disparities in US for cannabis arrests

Black Americans 3.64x more likely to be arrested than white (in 2013 it was 3.73)

KY second highest in disparity (9.4x more likely) OH 28th (3.4x)

100

Dutch gov. coffee shops and how it separates hard and soft drug markets

Coffee shops are places to buy and smoke weed, if ran under regulations, gov looks other way. Separates markets by providing legitimate place to get weed rather than street dealer who may want to sell harder drug for more profit

100

3 conditions where medical cannabis is conclusively helpful

1. muscle spasms caused by MS

2. chronic pain in adults

3. nausea caused by chemo

200

Prohibition cont.

1. Economic reason for prohibition ending

2. Effect of temperance movement

1. great depression: if alcohol legal, more available jobs for people who were unemployed

2. Temperance movement (women wanting husbands to stop drinking/being deadbeats/abusive) led to negative attitudes toward alcohol

200

What would happen if weed became Schedule III?

It would still be federally illegal, but could be prescribed and researched

200

How did Dutch gov respond to Drug Tourism

banned cannabis sales at coffee shops to non-residents

200

Australian and West Australian policy:

1. medical cannabis legal nationwide

2. states/provinces determine recreational law

3. ACT: only place with legal rec (grow and give)

4. West Australia: found that civil punishments for weed offenses better than criminal

200

How many states have legalized medical marijuana

40 states and DC

300

How did prejudice influence US alcohol policy's formation?

Anti-Catholic sentiments against Irish/Italian immigrants and their "overuse" of alcohol led to prohibition in a Protestant US

300

Options for weed legalization often discussed today

1. keep prohibition but loosen sanctions

2. liquor store model (sell only in specific stores)

300

Impact of Canada's cannabis policy

1. public health issues increased (cannabis related ER visits)

2. social justice improved, fewer cannabis arrests

3. youth's cannabis problems decreased slower than places where is illegal

300

Cannabis social clubs in Spain: pros and cons

Pro: promotes intentional and planned use

Con: Eastern European org. crime/black market is involved bc of how big theyre getting

Con: member-recommended system is flimsy and many drug tourists get in

300

Impact medical marijuana legalization had on teens using cannabis

Has actually lowered it, since ID requirement is more of a barrier than the black market

400

1. According to WHO, what are the most effective policies to reduce consumption and alcohol-related problems?

2. What types of policies are more politically palatable than those above? Give an example of such a program

1. taxation, limiting access, restrict advertising

2. policies targeting specific issues resulting from alcohol (ie DUI laws)

400

Dutch 'weitexperiment' 

Government-grown weed to supply to coffee shops

400

Pro and Con of DC's grow and give model

Pro: decreases marketing/for profit sale to heavy users

Con: difficult to monitor if there is any trade going on

400

what new law may shut down Spanish cannabis clubs

Law that no substance can be smoked in an enclosed space with other people

400

Ohio's medical cannabis law, including what is specifically banned

1. must have ID card as patient or caregiver

2. must pay with cash and use in private

3. cannot SMOKE, must vaporize

500

1. Describe the impact of minimum unit pricing in Scotland and Wales

2. Discuss the impact of lockout laws in Sydney, Australia, on non-domestic and domestic violence, and tell why the laws were lifted in 2020-21.

1. MUP led to 7.6% less alcohol consumption

2. Lockout laws decreased both domestic (29%) and non-domestic violence (52%), laws lifted in 2020 because of harms on local business

500

Dutch cannabis use versus other Euro countries/US

1. use higher than other European countries with stricter laws

2. use lower than US (where it is illegal)

3. Dutch fade out use as they get older more than US residents

500

When did people on cannabis 1. think they could drive, 2. actually could drive, 3. driving worsened after consumption

1. an hour and a half after use

2. four and a half hours after use

3. half an hour after use

500

Rules of Dutch Coffee Shops

1. must be Dutch resident

2. must be of age

3. must smoke on premises

500

Describe the Supreme Court’s decision in Gonzales v. Raich and its aftermath today

1. Court sided with fed gov. right to shut down medical marijuana growth even if legal in state

2. conservatives majority voted with medical marijuana rights, but it was in support of States Rights

3. Currently: gov. renews Appropriations Rider in every yearly budget to overlook MM (but if they dont, courts decision goes into effect)

4. Holder Memo: said fed resources shouldnt be wasted on stopping state-legal medical marijuana growth

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