World Wide Weed: Global Trends in Cannabis Cultivation and its Control

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Routledge, Feb 11, 2016 - Social Science - 320 pages
For the majority of its history, the cultivation of cannabis did not stand out, at least compared to the cultivation of other illegal plants. Cannabis plantations, like coca bush or opium poppy plantations, were typically large in size, grown by local farmers in a handful of developing (producing) countries, processed and then exported to industrial (consuming) nations. While cocaine and heroin are still produced in a handful of developing countries, cannabis cultivation is increasingly universal. From Europe to the Americas and Oceania, import substitution in cannabis markets has been noticed in almost every developed country around the world, with a notable aversion for discrimination. Geographical, technological, cultural and economic factors help to explain why (indoor and outdoor) domestic cultivation is well established, and why the nature and extent of cultivation varies so dramatically across the western, developed nations. As we start the second decade of the 21st century, the new cannabis industry continues to fascinate both casual and academic observers of the drug scene. Researchers around the world have become increasingly interested in the phenomenon, aiming to describe, and potentially explain, the rapid switch from importation to domestic production in their own countries. In bringing together some of the world's leading experts on cannabis cultivation this book contains sixteen chapters that take an interdisciplinary look at global trends in cannabis cultivation. It will serve as an exemplar for wider discussions of key theories and concepts relating to the spread not just of cannabis cultivation, but also of illegal markets more generally, the actors that operate within these markets and the policies and practices that are employed in response to developments within these markets.
 

Contents

List of Contributors
Preface by Peter Reuter
Peculiar and Perplexed The Complexity of Ganja Cultivation in
Cannabis Cultivation Practices in the Moroccan
Tom Decorte Gary Potter and Martin Bouchard
Stories Facts and Myths Perceptions of Domestic Cultivators
Professionals or Amateurs? Revisiting the Notion of Professional Crime
Cooffending Networks in Cannabis Cultivation
Cannabis Cultivation in Spain The Case of Cannabis Social Clubs
Reforming Laws Applying to Domestic Cannabis Production as a Harm
A Review of Cannabis Properties and Experiments for its Biological
The Seizure Rate of Cannabis Crop Eradication Operations in
Cannabis Eradication in the Developed World
Emerging Trends in Cannabis Cultivation and The Way Forward
Index
Copyright

Cannabis Cultivation in the United States

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About the author (2016)

Professor Tom Decorte is Director of the Institute for Social Drug Research, Ghent University, Belgium, Dr. Gary Potter is Senior Lecturer in Criminology, London South Bank University, UK and Professor Martin Bouchard is Assistant Professor in the School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, Canada.

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