Implications of legalisation of cannabis cultivation in Ghana: a critical review

IF 1.3 Q4 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Drugs, habits and social policy Pub Date : 2023-12-01 DOI:10.1108/dhs-06-2023-0023
Jacob Mensah Agboli
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Abstract

Purpose Following the trend in the world over and on the African continent, the Parliament of Ghana passed a new law in 2020, the Narcotics Control Commission Act (Act 1019) that eased the legal restrictions on cannabis cultivation and use, subject to obtaining license from the relevant authority/authorities. This paper aims to examine the implications of Ghana’s decision to legalise the cultivation of cannabis for industrial purposes for the production of fibre and for medicinal purposes. Design/methodology/approach The author adopted the qualitative analysis critical review methodology in sourcing information from peer-reviewed articles, coupled with the author’s own professional knowledge, background and training, to critically analyse and review the reasons behind Ghana’s decision to legalise cannabis cultivation and the implications such a major policy change/shift. Findings It was found that, while the law mentions industrial and medicinal purposes for the legalisation of cannabis, the real reason, at least in the immediate term, is mainly economic. This agrees with those of other African countries that have legalised cannabis cultivation but appears to contrast with those of Europe and America. Research limitations/implications This research is limited to Ghana and the few African countries that have legalised cannabis cultivation so far. The main reason for the legalisation (economic benefits) may also change in the future when the economics of scale turn in the favour of the country. Therefore, Ghana’s case may not represent the case of all countries legalising cannabis cultivation. Practical implications The research implication of this paper is that it brings to the world the law on cannabis cultivation in Ghana. It provides a professional and scientific position paper on Ghana’s drug law regime regarding cannabis, thus, serving as a useful reference literature to the academic and research community on the topic. More importantly, it discusses the implications of such major policy change from an objective perspective, unravelling the real reason behind the State’s decision to legalise the cultivation of cannabis in Ghana. Social implications This paper will bring to the fore the other consequences of Ghana’s cannabis cultivation legalisation policy change, which little attention has been devoted to so far. Originality/value This paper, apart from reference to other published texts on the topic, which have been duly acknowledged, represents the sole work of the author. It has not been produced anywhere or by anyone else either in Ghana or elsewhere.
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加纳大麻种植合法化的影响:重要评论
根据世界各地和非洲大陆的趋势,加纳议会于2020年通过了一项新法律,即《麻醉品管制委员会法》(第1019号法案),放宽了对大麻种植和使用的法律限制,但须获得有关当局的许可。本文旨在研究加纳决定将用于生产纤维和药用目的的工业用途大麻种植合法化的影响。设计/方法/方法作者采用定性分析批判性审查方法,从同行评议的文章中获取信息,再加上作者自己的专业知识,背景和培训,批判性地分析和审查加纳决定大麻种植合法化背后的原因以及这种重大政策变化/转变的影响。调查结果发现,虽然法律提到了大麻合法化的工业和医疗目的,但至少在短期内,真正的原因主要是经济上的。这与其他已经将大麻种植合法化的非洲国家的情况一致,但似乎与欧洲和美国的情况形成了对比。这项研究仅限于加纳和迄今为止大麻种植合法化的少数非洲国家。当规模经济对国家有利时,合法化的主要原因(经济利益)也可能在未来发生变化。因此,加纳的情况可能不能代表所有大麻种植合法化国家的情况。实际意义本文的研究意义是为世界带来加纳大麻种植的法律。它提供了一份关于加纳关于大麻的毒品法律制度的专业和科学立场文件,从而成为学术界和研究界关于该专题的有用参考文献。更重要的是,它从客观的角度讨论了这种重大政策变化的影响,揭示了国家决定在加纳使大麻种植合法化的真正原因。社会影响这篇论文将把加纳大麻种植合法化政策变化的其他后果带到前台,到目前为止,很少有人关注这一点。原创性/价值这篇论文,除了参考了其他已发表的关于这个主题的文献,这些文献已经得到了适当的承认,代表了作者的唯一作品。在加纳或其他地方,没有任何地方或任何人生产过它。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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