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Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets

David Bewley-Taylor Orcid Logo, Martin Jelsma, Sylvia Kay

Drug Policies and Development, Volume: 12, Pages: 106 - 124

Swansea University Author: David Bewley-Taylor Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Significant policy shifts have led to an unprecedented boom in medical cannabis markets, while a growing number of countries are moving towards the legal regulation of adult non-medical use. This trend is likely to bring a range of benefits. Yet there are growing concerns over the many for-profit ca...

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Published in: Drug Policies and Development
ISBN: 9789004440487 9789004440494
ISSN: 978-90-04-44048-7 978-90-04-44049-4
Published: Geneva Brill | Nijhoff 2020
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa55852
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first_indexed 2020-12-08T16:06:48Z
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spelling 2022-06-15T15:11:36.9448129 v2 55852 2020-12-08 Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets 0807b03501c47902946df41da4ddf2a4 0000-0003-1724-4223 David Bewley-Taylor David Bewley-Taylor true false 2020-12-08 APC Significant policy shifts have led to an unprecedented boom in medical cannabis markets, while a growing number of countries are moving towards the legal regulation of adult non-medical use. This trend is likely to bring a range of benefits. Yet there are growing concerns over the many for-profit cannabis companies from the global North that are aggressively competing to capture the licit spaces now opening in the multibillion-dollar global cannabis market. This threatens to push small-scale traditional farmers from the global South out of the emerging legal markets. Those trying to transition out of illegality face huge difficulties due to a combination of the legacy of criminalisation and administrative barriers to entry. Conquering and protecting spaces for small-scale farmers within the current overheated and corporate-driven market will require affirmative action, regulation of foreign investment, and well-designed legislative and market strategies. This policy comment explores the unfolding market dynamics from a development perspective and offers a set of guiding principles and policy proposals upon which a more equitable, fair(er) trade cannabis regulation model can be built. Book chapter Drug Policies and Development 12 106 124 Brill | Nijhoff Geneva 9789004440487 9789004440494 978-90-04-44048-7 978-90-04-44049-4 27 8 2020 2020-08-27 10.1163/9789004440494_007 COLLEGE NANME Politics, Philosophy and International Relations COLLEGE CODE APC Swansea University 2022-06-15T15:11:36.9448129 2020-12-08T16:03:38.8616127 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations David Bewley-Taylor 0000-0003-1724-4223 1 Martin Jelsma 2 Sylvia Kay 3 55852__19170__aa2dfb4c949d4715a7a98e3180efc69a.pdf 55852.pdf 2021-01-25T13:31:52.5914455 Output 2927281 application/pdf Version of Record true This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC-BY-NC 4.0 license true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
title Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
spellingShingle Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
David Bewley-Taylor
title_short Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
title_full Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
title_fullStr Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
title_full_unstemmed Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
title_sort Cannabis Regulation and Development: Fair(er) Trade Options for Emerging Legal Markets
author_id_str_mv 0807b03501c47902946df41da4ddf2a4
author_id_fullname_str_mv 0807b03501c47902946df41da4ddf2a4_***_David Bewley-Taylor
author David Bewley-Taylor
author2 David Bewley-Taylor
Martin Jelsma
Sylvia Kay
format Book chapter
container_title Drug Policies and Development
container_volume 12
container_start_page 106
publishDate 2020
institution Swansea University
isbn 9789004440487
9789004440494
issn 978-90-04-44048-7
978-90-04-44049-4
doi_str_mv 10.1163/9789004440494_007
publisher Brill | Nijhoff
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hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations
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description Significant policy shifts have led to an unprecedented boom in medical cannabis markets, while a growing number of countries are moving towards the legal regulation of adult non-medical use. This trend is likely to bring a range of benefits. Yet there are growing concerns over the many for-profit cannabis companies from the global North that are aggressively competing to capture the licit spaces now opening in the multibillion-dollar global cannabis market. This threatens to push small-scale traditional farmers from the global South out of the emerging legal markets. Those trying to transition out of illegality face huge difficulties due to a combination of the legacy of criminalisation and administrative barriers to entry. Conquering and protecting spaces for small-scale farmers within the current overheated and corporate-driven market will require affirmative action, regulation of foreign investment, and well-designed legislative and market strategies. This policy comment explores the unfolding market dynamics from a development perspective and offers a set of guiding principles and policy proposals upon which a more equitable, fair(er) trade cannabis regulation model can be built.
published_date 2020-08-27T04:10:22Z
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