Gary Potter


Session

06-13
15:20
20min
Small-scale cannabis growers’ preferences for cannabis production regulation
Michala Kowalski, Davide Fortin, Daniel Bear, Gary Potter

Background: In jurisdictions that have already legalised cannabis only 62% of domestic growers indicated in a global survey that their grows were compliant with the law. Research is needed to design a cannabis regulatory environment that would encourage higher levels of compliance with the law.

Objective: To study the policy preferences of domestic cannabis growers regarding cannabis production under a (hypothetical) legal cannabis model.

Method: We surveyed 11,479 small-scale cannabis growers (ICCQ V2) from 2020 to 2021. We analysed (descriptive statistics, regressions and cluster analysis) a subsample of 6,296 respondents who lived in 13 jurisdictions that had not legalised recreational cannabis (at the time) and one jurisdiction that had legalised recreational cannabis using R.

Results: Growers’ preferred policy would allow for unlicensed private grows of cannabis by adults, while selling cannabis would necessitate a license (59%). Paid employment was associated with increased support for this policy (63%). Lower levels of support for this policy were associated with selling own-grown cannabis (46%) and contact with police for cannabis cultivation (48%). Growers indicated that large pricing gaps between a legal and black-market cannabis price increased the likelihood of illegal growing activity.
Conclusion: An inclusive regulatory model that allowed for private domestic grows of cannabis, alongside legal cannabis sold at a price that is not substantially higher than black-market cannabis, would likely be met by high levels of compliance by people who are currently growing their own cannabis and not involved in distribution.

Equity and Equality in Drug Policy
BS 3.15 - 60 cap.