High compliance 

a lex lata legalization for the non-medical cannabis industry

How to regulate recreational cannabis in accordance with the Single Convention on narcotic drugs, 1961

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Read the Executive summary

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Read the Full report

In the current legal landscape, it is possible to craft policy that combats drug abuse and drug harms, protects human rights, and complies with international drug control law in good faith, by regulating the recreational uses of cannabis products rather than outlawing them. This essay proposes exactly that solution.

The international drug control Conventions establish the international legal regime for cannabis, but they are silent on “recreational” or “adult use.” However, they do include broad exemptions in the case of “other than medical and scientific uses in the context of industry.” They are not prohibition treaties, but Framework Conventions on the Control of Some Medicines within the Medical and Pharmaceutical Sectors. Shortcomings in the history of the drug control Conventions, and the current hegemony of one particular interpretation (articulated around prohibition), may have impacted our interpretive frames and discouraged legal scholarship from the study of these exemptions for non-medical uses, purposefully added in the treaty.

Via an applicatory contestation of the Conventions reliant on classical methods of treaty interpretation, this essay underlines the relevance of these exemptions in the context of domestic “cannabis legalization” efforts. The legal scheme which applies to the Cannabis plant and its derivatives is two-fold: (1) activities related to medical and scientific purposes are under control, (2) activities for “other than medical and scientific purposes” are exempt from control, provided that two requirements are met: implement effective measures to avoid harms & provide reasonable statistical reporting to the INCB.

This existing, good faith, legitimate international legal regime for adult-use cannabis opens an alternative pathway for decision-makers, appeasing rule tension and rerouting international relations on Cannabis matters onto less conflictual tracks.

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Executive summary

9 pages A5 – 2 300 words

High compliance, a lex lata legalization for the non-medical cannabis industry: How to regulate recreational cannabis in accordance with the Single Convention on narcotic drugs, 1961 (executive summary cover) Available for download at https://faaat.net/highcompliance

High compliance, a lex lata legalization for the non-medical cannabis industry: How to regulate recreational cannabis in accordance with the Single Convention on narcotic drugs

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Full report

110 pages A4 – 28 000 words (w/o footnotes)

High compliance, a lex lata legalization for the non-medical cannabis industry: How to regulate recreational cannabis in accordance with the Single Convention on narcotic drugs, 1961 (report cover) Available for download at https://faaat.net/highcompliance

Suggested reference: Riboulet-Zemouli K. (2022). High compliance, a lex lata legalization for the non-medical cannabis industry: How to regulate recreational cannabis in accordance with the Single Convention on narcotic drugs, 1961. Paris and Washington, DC: FAAAT editions. ISBN: 979-10-97087-23-4 (pdf). faaat.net/highcompliance 


Keywords: Cannabis, international law, treaty interpretation, drug control, 1961 Single Convention, recreational use, non-medical use, abuse, compliance, intertemporality, international relations


First published in March 2022 by FAAAT editions32 rue Vitruve, ℅ ASUD, 75020, Paris, France. Published in the United States of America by FAAAT editions, PO box 9853, Washington DC, 20016, United States of America. | BY-SA 4.0 2022 contents: Kenzi Riboulet-Zemouli; cover p​hotos: Maurice Narkozy | Library of Congress Control Number 2022902549; ISBN 979-10-97087-23-4 (PDF), 979-10-97087-24-1 (paperback), 979-10-97087-22-7 (spiral bound) |​​Stable URL: faaat.net/highcompliance (this webpage)

 


Statement delivered in plenary at the 65th Commission on Narcotic Drugs (United Nations):

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