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John Hudak - Marijuana

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John Hudak Marijuana
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PRAISE FOR THE FIRST EDITION OF MARIJUANA A SHORT HISTORY Clear Concise - photo 1

PRAISE FOR THE FIRST EDITION OFMARIJUANA: A SHORT HISTORY

Clear. Concise. Compelling. Marijuana: A Short History is a great crash course on the history of cannabis. This is a wonderful book for anyone who wants a deeper understanding of the current political landscape, as well as the players and events that have shaped it.

Steph Sherer, executive director, Americans for Safe Access

A fresh, sharp, and rigorous look at Americas perverse relationship with pot. John Hudak smashes taboos and nonsense on every page.

Bruce Barcott, author,Weed the People: The Future of Legal Marijuana

MARIJUANA

A Short History

Second Edition JOHN HUDAK BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS Washington DC - photo 2

Second Edition

JOHN HUDAK

BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS

Washington, D.C.

Copyright 2020

THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION

1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20036

www.brookings.edu

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Brookings Institution Press.

The Brookings Institution is a private nonprofit organization devoted to research, education, and publication on important issues of domestic and foreign policy. Its principal purpose is to bring the highest quality independent research and analysis to bear on current and emerging policy problems. Interpretations or conclusions in Brookings publications should be understood to be solely those of the authors.

Library of Congress Control Number: 2020936126

ISBN 9780815738312 (pbk : alk. paper)

ISBN 9780815738329 (ebook)

9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Typeset in Poynter Oldstyle Text

Composition by Elliott Beard

For Michelle Dean

Contents

Acknowledgments

Working on marijuana reform was one of the last things I expected would be part of my career when I began doing political and policy research. I am not an advocate; I am a political scientist. I was not trained in the study of drug policy; I was trained in the study of political institutions, specifically the presidency and the bureaucracy.

However, sometimes very interesting opportunities fall into your lap, and a new venture becomes a career highlight. Marijuana policy is exactly that. I came to this issue in part by happenstance and largely because a colleague of mine, Jonathan Rauch, encouraged me to ask the types of questions my research focuses on (regulation, personnel, bureaucratic organization, and executive-legislative interaction) and apply it to a new and emerging area of policy: the legalization of adult-use marijuana.

That spurred an interest in marijuana policy of all types and led to extensive research, many trips and interviews, as well as a nearly obsessive reading into the plant, its products, the people, and the policy. Along the way, I worked with a tremendous group of individuals who approach this issue from all directionsfrom the full-throated advocate to the staunchest of opponents and everyone in between. Their support, guidance, knowledge, experience, personal stories, and perspectives have helped inform my understanding of marijuana policy and made Marijuana: A Short History what it is.

Chief among all of the people with whom I have worked is my former colleague and frequent coauthor, Grace Wallack. Grace has an incredible mind for whatever endeavor she undertakes. As in my case, marijuana policy was not a lifelong passion or expected part of her job, but as a team we picked apart some of the most complex issues surrounding marijuana policy and sought to explain them to whomever would listen. It turned out, a lot of people listened. Without her support, intellect, motivation, and ability to keep me on track, the marijuana research emerging from my office would have been a shell of what it is today. She deserves both the highest of praise and my complete gratitude.

Other Brookings colleagues have helped inform my work, my understanding of marijuana policy, and were excellent sounding boards as this book came to fruition. Christine Stenglein, Phil Wallach, Jon Rauch, Makada Henry-Nickie, Aaron Klein, Ashley Gabriele, the Brookings Creative Lab Team (George Burroughs, Sareen Hairabedian, Mark Hoelscher, Zach Kulzer, Ian McAllister), Emily Perkins, Ashley Bennett, Jessica Brandt, Bob Brier, Brittany Brown-Hart, Stephanie Dahle, Courtney Dunakin, Anna Goodbaum, Christine Jacobs, Dylan Jennings, Elaine Kamarck, Ellie Klein, Curtlyn Kramer, Nick McClellan, Cody Poplin, Camilo Ramirez, Liz Sablich, Jessica Harris, Beth Stone, Strobe Talbott, Liz Thom, Darrell West, and Nick Zeppos. Each deserves my thanks.

Outside of Brookings, a number of peopletoo many to list completelyhave been hugely influential and helpful to me. They include Ricardo Baca, Barb Brohl, Jonathan Caulkins, Mike Collins, Beth Collins and Pat Collins and their daughter, Jennifer Collins, Michael Correia, Sean Easter, Brian Faughnan, Steve Fox, Andrew Freedman, Alison Holcomb, Jeff Kahn, Ron Kammerzell, Beau Kilmer, Mark Kleiman, Blake Komar, Lewis Koski, Miles Light, Stephanie Phillips, Dan Riffle, Scot Rutledge, Kevin Sabet, Steph Sherer, Sue Sisley, Sarah Trumble, John Walsh, and Jeff Zinsmeister.

In addition, I would like to thank my colleagues Bill Brown, Rob Lang, and the entire Brookings Mountain West and UNLV community, especially the dozens of students I have taught and worked with around this issue. I would also extend a thanks to Brian Greenspun, John Ritter, and the many owners and operators in the cannabis industry in southern Nevada who have helped me. In addition, a special thanks goes to Congressman Earl Blumenauer, and my favorite Nevada electeds, Patricia Farley and Tick Segerblom.

Finally, to all the elected officials, law enforcement, doctors, scientists, activists (on both sides), academics, growers, dispensary owners, marijuana industry employees, and regulators, a huge thank you for opening your doors and letting me in to see exactly what the cannabis world looks like from your point of view. The many people involved in this policy space whom I have visited in Alaska, California, Canada, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, Ohio, Uruguay, Virginia, and Washingtonthank you for your generous offer of time and insight.

A huge thank you goes to the Brookings Institution Press, especially Bill Finan, Elliott Beard, Cecilia Gonzlez, Valentina Kalk, Janet Walker, and Carrie Engel.

Finally, a special note of gratitude goes to my wife, Emily Parsons. Em is a woman with unending patience, listening to me drone on endlessly about pot for months and now years. Her motivation and encouragement through this projectlike all projectshave ensured that I am nearly as proud of this book as I am of her each day. She deserves both my love and gratitude.

Introduction

Marijuana is not new. For millennia, humans have used the cannabis plant for medicine, recreation, religious purposes, and food. The fibers of some cannabis plants, also called hemp, have been used to make rope and textiles. The drug that is made from the plant has also led to the expansion of government power, the imprisonment of hundreds of thousands of individuals, wars waged between nations, and the vilification of some racial and ethnic groups.

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