AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Erica Zunkel, Alison Siegler THE FEDERAL JUDICIARY'S ROLE IN DRUG LAW REFORM IN AN ERA OF CONGRESSIONAL DYSFUNCTION 18 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 283 (Fall, 2020) While state drug law reform is moving apace, federal drug law reform has moved much more slowly. Many, including the Judicial Conference of the United States and the United States Sentencing Commission, have urged Congress to enact substantive federal drug law reform for years. But Congress has not acted. As a result, the federal system continues... 2020
Pebbles Fagan, PhD, MPH , Thomas Eissenberg, PhD , Dina M. Jones, PhD, MPH , Joanna E. Cohen, PhD , Patricia Nez Henderson, MD, MPH , Mark S. Clanton, MD, MPH THE FIRST 10 YEARS: REFLECTING ON OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES OF THE TOBACCO PRODUCTS SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF THE UNITED STATES FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION 40 Journal of Legal Medicine 293 (December, 2020) Introduction: Tobacco control policies have helped to reduce the health, social, and economic burden of commercial tobacco use worldwide. Little is known about the long-term impact of regulatory policies and functioning bodies that make recommendations to inform policies. The Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (TPSAC) of the U.S. Food... 2020
Cece White THE SATIVAS AND INDICAS OF PROOF: WHY THE SMELL OF MARIJUANA SHOULD NOT ESTABLISH PROBABLE CAUSE FOR A WARRANTLESS VEHICLE SEARCH IN ILLINOIS 53 UIC John Marshall Law Review 187 (Fall, 2020) I. Introduction. 188 A. Marijuana: A Legal Substance Unlike Any Other. 188 B. Comment Overview. 192 II. Background. 193 A. The Fourth Amendment & Expectations of Privacy. 193 B. The Automobile Exception to the Fourth Amendment's Warrant Preference. 197 C. Probable Cause in the Context of an Automobile. 198 D. Plain View Doctrine & its Extension... 2020
Antonia Eliason , Robert Howse TOWARDS GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THE INADEQUACIES OF THE UN DRUG CONTROL REGIME 114 AJIL Unbound 291 (2020) Human rights and the UN drug control regime have long had an uneasy relationship, which is evident today in the tensions that exist between criminal justice reform advocates, the institutions of the UN drug control regime, and economic interests that stand to benefit from decriminalization and legalization efforts. The UN drug control regime's... 2020
Steve P. Calandrillo , Katelyn Fulton "HIGH" STANDARDS: THE WAVE OF MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION SWEEPING AMERICA IGNORES THE HIDDEN RISKS OF EDIBLES 80 Ohio State Law Journal 201 (2019) As a tide of marijuana legalization sweeps across the United States, there is a surprising lack of scrutiny as to whether the benefits of recreational marijuana outweigh the risks. Notably, marijuana edibles present special risks to the population that are not present in smoked marijuana. States that have legalized recreational marijuana are seeing... 2019
Wesley A. Shumway 2017 DRUG LAWS IN WEST VIRGINIA: THE WRONG PRESCRIPTION FOR THE STATE'S OPIOID CRISIS 123 Penn State Law Review 559 (Winter, 2019) The United States has been devastated by an opioid epidemic. The 1990s, with shifting views of pain management and aggressive marketing of OxyContin, saw the beginning of a crisis that has taken the country by storm. Pain medication prescription rates skyrocketed throughout the United States, and as a result, addiction, overdose, and death have... 2019
Cara O'Connor A GUIDING HAND OR A SLAP ON THE WRIST: CAN DRUG COURTS BE THE SOLUTION TO MATERNAL OPIOID USE? 109 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 103 (Winter, 2019) As the opioid epidemic has expanded its reach, the number of pregnant women addicted to opioids has increased exponentially in recent years. The increase in the number of opioid-addicted pregnant women has resulted in a drastic expansion in the number of newborns who experience Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS). Newborns affected with NAS... 2019
Susan F. Mandiberg A HYBRID APPROACH TO MARIJUANA FEDERALISM 23 Lewis & Clark Law Review 823 (2019) With the evident indulgence of the United States Department of Justice, states are jumping on the bandwagon of legalizing medicinal and recreational marijuana even though marijuana use is criminalized under the Federal Controlled Substances Act. The possibility that the federal government will at some point decriminalize marijuana use poses a... 2019
Brendan Walden ADDICTED TO THE WAR ON DRUGS 5 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law & Public Affairs 1 (November, 2019) Introduction. 1 I. America's Drug Problem Introduction. 2 II. Institutional Barriers and Solutions. 5 III. The Battle for Harm Reduction in Philadelphia. 8 IV. Social Work & the Path Forward. 12 Conclusion. 13 2019
Leo Beletsky AMERICA'S FAVORITE ANTIDOTE: DRUG-INDUCED HOMICIDE IN THE AGE OF THE OVERDOSE CRISIS 2019 Utah Law Review 833 (2019) Nearing the end of its second decade, the overdose crisis in the United States continues to claim tens of thousands of lives. Despite the rhetorical emphasis on a public health approach, criminal law and its enforcement continue to play a central role among policy responses to this crisis. A legacy of the 1980s War on Drugs, statutory provisions... 2019
Sam Kamin COLORADO MARIJUANA REGULATION FIVE YEARS LATER: HAVE WE LEARNED ANYTHING AT ALL? 96 Denver Law Review 221 (Winter, 2019) This Article is based on the 2018 University Lecture of the same name that I presented at the University of Denver on April 24, 2018. January 1, 2019 marks five years of taxed and regulated adult-use marijuana in Colorado. In this Article, I address much of the misinformation and hyperbole that has been disseminated regarding this... 2019
Seth J. Prins, Columbia University CRIMINOGENIC OR CRIMINALIZED? TESTING AN ASSUMPTION FOR EXPANDING CRIMINOGENIC RISK ASSESSMENT 43 Law and Human Behavior 477 (October, 2019) Objectives: Proponents of criminogenic risk assessment have called for its widespread expansion throughout the criminal justice system. Its success in predicting recidivism is taken as evidence that criminogenic risks tap into the causes of criminal behavior, and that targeting these factors can reduce correctional supervision rates and even... 2019
Craig J. Konnoth DRUGS' OTHER SIDE-EFFECTS 105 Iowa Law Review 171 (November, 2019) Drugs often induce unintended, adverse physiological reactions in those that take them--what we commonly refer to as side-effects. However, drugs can produce other, broader, unintended, even non-physiological harms. For example, some argue that taking Truvada, a drug that prevents HIV transmission, increases promiscuity and decreases... 2019
Emily Ponder Williams FAIR HOUSING'S DRUG PROBLEM: COMBATTING THE RACIALIZED IMPACT OF DRUG-BASED HOUSING EXCLUSIONS ALONGSIDE DRUG LAW REFORM 54 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 769 (Summer, 2019) Five years after her release from incarceration and a decade after her last and only conviction for the sale of a controlled substance, Veronica Martinez was deemed too dangerous for admission as a New York City Housing Authority tenant. Martinez was considered dangerous, despite her showing that the conviction arose from a coercive, abusive... 2019
Olivia Li FROM HOUSING TO HEALTH: IMAGINING ANTIDISCRIMINATION PROVISIONS FOR MENTHOL CIGARETTE MARKETING 9 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 369 (2019) Smoking has been decreasing steadily over the past several decades, but advertisers still target some populations for cigarette consumption. Currently, almost nine out of ten African American smokers smoke mentholated cigarettes compared to only one in four White Americans. This disparity in use came about through decades of targeted marketing... 2019
Jelani Jefferson Exum FROM WARFARE TO WELFARE: RECONCEPTUALIZING DRUG SENTENCING DURING THE OPIOID CRISIS 67 University of Kansas Law Review 941 (June, 2019) The War on Drugs officially began in 1971 when President Nixon decried drug abuse as public enemy number one. The goal of the war rhetoric was clear--to cast drug abuse and the drug offender as dangerous adversaries of the law-abiding public, requiring military-like tactics to defeat. Criminal sentencing would come to be the main weapon used in... 2019
Ilya Shapiro, Matthew Larosiere HIGH ON FEDERALISM: MARIJUANA'S CHALLENGE TO FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS 11 Kentucky Journal of Equine, Agriculture, and Natural Resources Law 341 (2018-2019) Our discussion of federalism as it relates to the ever-so-tumultuous marijuana issue is rooted in the Commerce Clause and an understanding of Gonzales v. Raich, the 2005 case in which the Supreme Court ruled that the federal government can indeed regulate the plants you grow in your own backyard for your own individual use. This decision came... 2019
Josh Bowers , Daniel Abrahamson KICKING THE HABIT: THE OPIOID CRISIS, AMERICA'S ADDICTION TO PUNITIVE PROHIBITION, AND THE PROMISE OF FREE HEROIN 80 Ohio State Law Journal 787 (2019) There is no single cause of America's opioid crisis. But unethical physicians and unscrupulous prescription practices undoubtedly have contributed. The federal government has responded predictably: criminally prosecuting doctors who prescribe opioids to the drug dependent. The approach may seem sensible, but it as wrongheaded as our century-old... 2019
Lewis A. Grossman LIFE, LIBERTY, [AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS]: MEDICAL MARIJUANA REGULATION IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT 74 Food & Drug Law Journal 280 (2019) It was 7:45 p.m. on Election Day, 1996. The thousands of people assembled in and around the Cannabis Buyers Club (CBC) on San Francisco's Market Street were eager for the polls to close in fifteen minutes so they could start smoking weed. The crowd had gathered for a victory party celebrating the expected passage of California Proposition 215, the... 2019
Michael Vitiello MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION, RACIAL DISPARITY, AND THE HOPE FOR REFORM 23 Lewis & Clark Law Review 789 (2019) The criminalization of marijuana is rooted in a deeply racist history and has devastated minority communities. Studies show that usage of the drug is consistent across racial groups, but arrests of minorities are nevertheless higher than arrests of white offenders. Indeed, those kinds of disparities have persuaded some voters and policy makers to... 2019
Zachary Ford REEFER MADNESS: THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONSEQUENCE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S INCONSISTENT MARIJUANA POLICY 6 Texas A&M Law Review 671 (Spring, 2019) In the past twenty years, the United States has witnessed over half of its states create marijuana laws that expressly contradict the federal government's complete ban of the drug. Nine states have completely legalized marijuana for recreational use in the past five years alone. Meanwhile, much of the country remains staunchly opposed to... 2019
Marylyn Harrell SERVING TIME FOR FALLING IN LOVE: HOW THE WAR ON DRUGS OPERATES TO THE DETRIMENT OF WOMEN OF CIRCUMSTANCE IN POOR URBAN COMMUNITIES OF COLOR 11 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 139 (Fall, 2019) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 140 II. What is a Woman of Circumstance?. 142 A. Background on the War on Drugs. 142 B. The Woman of Circumstance. 143 III. Conspiracy Laws and Mandatory Minimum Sentencing: The Dastardly Duo Keeping Women of Circumstance Behind Bars. 145 A. Conspiracy Laws. 145 B. Mandatory Minimums. 147 C. How Can a Woman... 2019
Braden H. Boucek THAT'S WHY I HANG MY HAT IN TENNESSEE: ALCOHOL AND THE COMMERCE CLAUSE 2019 Cato Supreme Court Review 119 (2018-2019) The Congress shall have the Power . [t]o regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes. Art. I, ยง 8 (a.k.a. the Commerce Clause) The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or Possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxication liquors, in violation of the... 2019
Christine Minhee , Steve Calandrillo THE CURE FOR AMERICA'S OPIOID CRISIS? END THE WAR ON DRUGS 42 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 547 (Spring, 2019) The War on Drugs. What began as a battle waged on morals has created multiple public health crises, and no recent phenomenon illustrates this in more macabre detail than America's opioid disaster. 2017 alone amassed a higher death toll than the totality of American military casualties in the Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan wars combined. With this... 2019
Ty McCoy THE NEED FOR HIGHER PUNISHMENT: LOCK UP THE REAL DRUG DEALERS 54 Gonzaga Law Review 47 (2018/2019) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 48 II. Criminals Are Criminals, But Their Punishments Are Not Always Fair And Equal. 51 A. Black Market Economics. 54 1. Prohibition of Drugs Is Not the Cure to the Opioid Problem. 55 2. Societal Stigma Has Aided and Abetted the Opioid Epidemic. 56 B. The Vicious Cycle of Aggressive Marketing. 57 1. Ohio Is in... 2019
Katherine Kuhl THE WAR ON AFFORDABLE HOUSING?: HOW ANTI-DRUG POLICIES PUT FAMILIES IN FEDERALLY SUBSIDIZED HOUSING AT RISK OF EVICTION, AND METHODS FOR MITIGATING THESE COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES 25 Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice 521 (Spring, 2019) L1-2Table of Contents II. Legal Implications of Drug-Related Activity in Federally Funded Housing. 528 III. Additional Factors Influencing the Intersection of Drug Criminalization and Housing Policy. 536 IV. Proposal. 541 V. Conclusion. 548 2019
Brittany Burnham THE WAR ON DRUGS: HOW AMERICA AND PHILIPPINES ARE FIGHTING THE WAR IN DIFFERENT WAYS YET BOTH ARE LOSING 42 Suffolk Transnational Law Review 327 (Summer, 2019) The global drug crisis has spiraled out of control in countries for years, requiring every country to initiate their own responses to the problem. The United States waged an official War on Drugs within its own borders in the 1970s. Since then, the United States fights this war by overutilizing its judicial and legislative systems, and imposing... 2019
Alejandro Madrazo , Antonio Barreto UNDERMINING CONSTITUTIONALISM IN THE NAME OF POLICY: THE CONSTITUTIONAL COSTS OF THE WAR ON DRUGS 21 NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 671 (2018-2019) Public policies are supposed to be transitory measures meant to face and solve public problems. Constitutional design, by contrast, involves permanent decisions adopted to rule the inner workings of the polity and its government. Although policy is most often imagined as transitory and constitutional law as permanent, some policy decisions... 2019
Brian G. Gilmore WASHINGTON, D.C.'S HEROIN EPIDEMIC OF THE 1970S AND TODAY'S OPIOID CRISIS: A COMPARATIVE HISTORY OF GOVERNMENT POLICY RESPONSES 70 South Carolina Law Review 669 (Spring, 2019) do you dig ray charles when the blues are silent in his throat & he rolls up his sleeves - Sam Cornish I. Introduction. 670 II. King Heroin. 672 A. Origins. 672 B. Heroin and Criminalization. 674 III. The District of Columbia and Heroin. 682 A. Heroin in the Nation's Capital. 682 B. The D.C. Epidemic and Government Action. 685 C. Robert DuPont and... 2019
Gregory S. Parks , Sabrina Parisi WHITE BOY WASTED: RACE, SEX, AND ALCOHOL USE IN FRATERNITY HAZING 34 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 1 (Spring, 2019) In the past few years, alcohol-related hazing deaths within white fraternities have received considerable attention. These deaths beg the question: what would it take to curtail such behavior and the harm that flows from it? A reasonable answer might be to impose stricter laws. However, if the goal of law is to regulate behavior by threatening... 2019
Alexis Holmes ZONING, RACE, AND MARIJUANA: THE UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF PROPOSITION 64 23 Lewis & Clark Law Review 939 (2019) This Article revisits the campaign to legalize cannabis in California with Proposition 64. It then dissects the localism within the new California regulations and how it conflicts with the social justice goals central to the spirit of Proposition 64's passage. With local governments retaining control over marijuana in their jurisdictions, land use... 2019
Mina Dixon Davis "BAD MOMS" AND POWERFUL PROSECUTORS: WHY A PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH TO MATERNAL DRUG USE IS NECESSARY TO LESSEN THE HARDSHIP BORNE BY WOMEN IN THE SOUTH 25 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 305 (Winter, 2018) I. Introduction. 306 II. U.S. Drug Crises and the Problem of Maternal Substance Use: A Shift to the South. 307 A. Opioid Overdose and Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Rates are Rising Rapidly in the South and Rural Regions. 308 B. Findings from the Abuse of Crack Cocaine in the 1980s Present Lessons for Today's Crisis. 310 III. Legal Approaches to... 2018
Michelle H. Walton BOOK REVIEW: MARIJUANA LAW, POLICY, AND AUTHORITY BY ROBERT A. MIKOS, PROFESSOR OF LAW, VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL 11 Albany Government Law Review 82 (2017-2018) In March 2017, United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions made his stance on the prohibition of marijuana clear: I reject the idea that America will be a better place if marijuana is sold in every corner store. And I am astonished to hear people suggest that we can solve our heroin crisis by legalizing marijuana--so people can trade one... 2018
Scott W. Howe CONSTITUTIONAL CLAUSE AGGREGATION AND THE MARIJUANA CRIMES 75 Washington and Lee Law Review 779 (Spring, 2018) An important question for our time concerns whether the Constitution could establish a right to engage in certain marijuana-related activities. Several states have now legalized cannabis, within strict limits, for recreational purposes, and that number will grow. Yet, some states will not promptly legalize but, instead, continue to criminalize, or... 2018
Michael Tackeff CONSTRUCTING A "CREATIVE READING": WILL US STATE CANNABIS LEGISLATION THREATEN THE FATE OF THE INTERNATIONAL DRUG CONTROL TREATIES? 51 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 247 (January, 2018) While marijuana remains illegal at the federal level in the United States, state-level efforts to legalize cannabis have gained enormous momentum in recent years. The federal government, which possesses only limited power to stop this trend, has responded by grudgingly allowing such efforts to proceed, maintaining that its inaction on the issue... 2018
Mona Lynch , Marisa Omori CRACK AS PROXY: AGGRESSIVE FEDERAL DRUG PROSECUTIONS AND THE PRODUCTION OF BLACK--WHITE RACIAL INEQUALITY 52 Law and Society Review 773 (September, 2018) In this article, we empirically examine jurisdictional variations in federal crack prosecutions to measure whether aggressive crack prosecutorial practices are associated with racial inequality in federal caseload characteristics and outcomes. Building on theories that address the production of inequality in institutional settings, we hypothesize... 2018
Zachary E. Shapiro , Elizabeth Curran, Rachel C. K. Hutchinson CYCLES OF FAILURE: THE WAR ON FAMILY, THE WAR ON DRUGS, AND THE WAR ON SCHOOLS THROUGH HBO'S THE WIRE 25 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 183 (Fall, 2018) C1-2Table of Contents Part One: The War on Families. 186 I. The War on Families. 186 A. Introduction. 186 B. The Function, Form, and Erosion of the Familial Institution. 187 II. Families As a Lynchpin in the Cycle of Harm in The Wire. 190 A. Michael's Story: The Failure of the Family. 191 B. The Barksdales. 193 C. Namond Brice. 194 III. Public... 2018
Leo Beletsky DEPLOYING PRESCRIPTION DRUG MONITORING TO ADDRESS THE OVERDOSE CRISIS: IDEOLOGY MEETS REALITY 15 Indiana Health Law Review 139 (2018) The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding. Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 479 (1928) (Brandeis, J., dissenting). The United States is in the midst of a historic drug overdose crisis. Each day, well over 100 Americans die of drug overdose, driven increasingly by... 2018
  DRUG POLICY--MARIJUANA JUSTICE ACT OF 2017-- SENATOR CORY BOOKER INTRODUCES ACT TO REPAIR THE HARMS EXACTED BY MARIJUANA PROHIBITION.--MARIJUANA JUSTICE ACT OF 2017, S. 1689, 115TH CONG 131 Harvard Law Review 926 (January, 2018) Marijuana's prohibition and gradual legalization in the United States has had a significant economic impact on those left in its wake. On one hand, the punitive approach to marijuana use taken by local and state law enforcement agencies has had pernicious economic consequences for low-income and minority individuals and communities. On the other,... 2018
Allyson Sam Sung DRUG USE AND PUNISHMENT: A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS AMERICA CAN NO LONGER IGNORE 17 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 129 (Summer, 2018) Over 63,000 people died from a drug overdose in 2016. Specifically, 42,249 people lost their lives to an opioid overdose. More people died of opioid overdose in 2016 than the 41,070 that died from breast cancer. From the lived experiences of losing a loved one, to news headlines, and heart-wrenching posts shared across social media platforms, most... 2018
Dana Roth GENDER BIAS IN CLINICAL DRUG TRIALS 33 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 83 (Spring, 2018) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 84 II. Clinical drug trials and women--The Science Problem. 87 A. Male and Female Bodies Inherently React to Drugs Differently. 87 B. Despite These Differences, There is a Long History of Not Including Women in Clinical Trials. 88 C. There Are Economic and Practical Incentives for Under-Inclusion of Women in... 2018
Ira P. Robbins GUNS N' GANJA: HOW FEDERALISM CRIMINALIZES THE LAWFUL USE OF MARIJUANA 51 U.C. Davis Law Review 1783 (June, 2018) Federalism is a vital tenet of our Republic. Although federal law is the supreme law of the land, our Constitution recognizes the integral role that state law plays in the national scheme. Like any pharmaceutical drug that withstands rounds of clinical testing, state law functions as a laboratory in which Congress can evaluate and potentially adopt... 2018
  LEVERAGING MARIJUANA REFORM TO ENHANCE EXPUNGEMENT PRACTICES Federal Sentencing Reporter (April 1, 2018 - June 1, 2018) State legislators and the general public are expressing evergreater concerns about the myriad costs of the war on drugs and the punitive treatment of less serious criminal offenders. These concerns have led officials and voters in nearly every state to embrace new laws and practices intended to reduce incarceration levels and to ameliorate the... 2018
Wadie E. Said LIMITLESS DISCRETION IN THE WARS ON DRUGS AND TERROR 89 University of Colorado Law Review 93 (Winter, 2018) The wars on terror and drugs have been defined, largely, by what they lack: a readily identifiable opponent, a clear end goal, a timeline, and geographical boundaries. Based on that understanding, this Article discusses the increasingly expansive discretion of American authorities to prosecute individuals where the wars on terror and drugs... 2018
Amol N. Sinha MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION AND CIVIL RIGHTS 314-OCT New Jersey Lawyer, the Magazine 86 (October, 2018) As the New Jersey Legislature contemplates legislation that would legalize, tax, and regulate cannabis for adult use, it must grapple with the fact that in addition to creating a new industry with important legal and business implications, it is dealing with a defining civil rights issue of the times: enforcement of evidently unjust marijuana... 2018
Joseph E. Kennedy , Isaac Unah , Kasi Wahlers SHARKS AND MINNOWS IN THE WAR ON DRUGS: A STUDY OF QUANTITY, RACE AND DRUG TYPE IN DRUG ARRESTS 52 U.C. Davis Law Review 729 (December, 2018) Conventional wisdom has it that in the war on drugs you have to catch small fish in order to catch big fish. But what if the vast majority of drug arrests were for very small fish, and disproportionately brown ones at that? This Article is the first to conclusively establish that the war on drugs is being waged primarily against those possessing or... 2018
Sophia House TAILORING REGIMES FOR A DESIGNER DRUG: DEVELOPING CIVIL LIABILITY FOR RETAILERS OF SYNTHETIC MARIJUANA 127 Yale Law Journal 764 (January, 2018) Over the past two years, homeless shelters in cities across America found themselves in crisis as residents have overdosed, sometimes en masse, on a drug known as synthetic marijuana. The drug's effects are devastating, discriminating, and bizarre--sending users to the emergency room for seizures, heart attacks, and kidney failure; showing... 2018
Tamar Todd THE BENEFITS OF MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION AND REGULATION 23 Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law 99 (Spring, 2018) There is increasing support for marijuana law reform than ever before, and the legalization of marijuana has many serious public policy implications. This paper highlights the problems with criminalizing marijuana use and its disparate impact on people of color. The criminalization of marijuana has also failed to meet its goals and has negative... 2018
Joseph J. Sabia, Thanh Tam Nguyen, San Diego State University, University of New Hampshire THE EFFECT OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAWS ON LABOR MARKET OUTCOMES 61 Journal of Law & Economics 361 (August, 2018) This study is the first to estimate the impact of state medical marijuana laws (MMLs) on labor market outcomes. First, using data from the National Survey of Drug Use and Health, we document that MMLs are associated with an increase in marijuana consumption among younger and older adult males, consistent with increases in use for both recreational... 2018
Tiffany R. Simmons, J.D. THE EFFECTS OF THE WAR ON DRUGS ON BLACK WOMEN: FROM EARLY LEGISLATION TO INCARCERATION 26 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 719 (2018) I. Introduction. 719 II. Early Legislation of the War on Drugs. 722 III. Federal Sentencing Regulations and the Shift of Power from Judges to Prosecutors. 724 IV. Prosecutorial Discretion and Its Disproportionate Impact on Black Women. 726 V. The Executive Branch's Impact on the War on Drugs and Sentencing Disparities (1991 to 2017). 733 VI. The... 2018
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