Cannabis: Report of the Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs

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University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2003 - Political Science - 229 pages
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Should the use of cannabis be decriminalized or legalized? If so, how should it be legislated, and for whom? Although Western nations have sought to address these questions for decades, there has never been a thorough and comprehensive study of the subject. A special committee of the Canadian senate sought to rectify this, and when their report was made public, it astonished observers with its audacious recommendations.

Important scientific resources were used for the committee's purposes: the investigations of 23 international researchers based on 200 interviews; the work of Canadian specialists working in an array of disciplines; and a large number of discussion groups. The essential recommendations of the report are found in this book. The Senate committee proposes new perspectives on illicit drugs, calling for a rational new political view that does not marginalize users. With innovative scientific investigation and bold recommendations, this report, prefaced by Senator Nolin, is an indispensable tool in the national and international debate surrounding cannabis.

 

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Contents

Introduction I
1
PART III
2
Our Mandate
7
PART II
29
Canadians Opinions and Attitudes
99
A National Drug Strategy?
109
Police Practices
127
Treatment Practices
147
The International Legal Environment
161
Conclusions and Recommendations
183
Committee Members
205
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Pierre Claude Nolin is President of the Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs.

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