Legalizing Marijuana
Drug Policy Reform and Prohibition Politics
by Rudolph J. Gerber
June 2004, 208pp, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
1 volume, Praeger

Hardcover: 978-0-275-97448-0
$55, £43, 48€, A76
Paperback: 978-0-313-36167-8
$35, £27, 31€, A48
eBook Available: 978-0-313-08542-0
Please contact your preferred eBook vendor for pricing.

Highlights the failures of the government’s war on marijuana, likening it to 1920s-style prohibition politics, and points to the need for citizen initiatives to change drug policy.

This book is a frontal assault on the federal government’s almost century-long campaign against marijuana in all its forms—cultivation, growing, selling, and recreational and medicinal use. Beginning with the anti-pot campaign of the first unofficial drug czar, Harry Anslinger, in the 1930s and continuing wiht only minor differences in emphasis through the recent Reagan, Clinton, and two Bush administrations, federal efforts to stamp out every form of marijuana use involve ignoring the independent reports of numerous federal commissions; supporting provably false claims about marijuana’s effects; acquiescing to conservative law enforcement and religious groups’ condemnatory agendas; generating a climate of fear in the electorate in order to cultivate messianic images for politicians; and ultimately governing in a way that does a disservice to all involved.

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