Cooperative Enforcement Agreements and Policy Waivers: New Options for Federal Accommodation to State-Level Cannabis Legalization
Passage of marijuana-legalization initiatives in Colorado and Washington poses a problem for the federal government: marijuana remains illegal under federal law, but the federal government lacks the capacity to fully enforce that law without state and local cooperation. Complete deference to state l...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Drug Policy Analysis 2013-07, Vol.6 (1), p.41-49 |
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description | Passage of marijuana-legalization initiatives in Colorado and Washington poses a problem for the federal government: marijuana remains illegal under federal law, but the federal government lacks the capacity to fully enforce that law without state and local cooperation. Complete deference to state legalization would put each state’s cannabis policy at the mercy of its neighbors’. A system of legislatively-authorized policy waivers would allow controlled exploration of alternative systems of control. In the absence of such authorization, the executive branch could use existing authority to craft cooperative agreements with the states intended to confine the effects of each state’s new policies within its own borders. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1515/jdpa-2013-0001 |
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subjects | Agreements Authority Cannabis Colorado Decriminalization drug abuse drug law enforcement Drug legalization Drug policy Executives Federal government International cooperation Law Local government Marijuana marijuana legalization State government State laws |
title | Cooperative Enforcement Agreements and Policy Waivers: New Options for Federal Accommodation to State-Level Cannabis Legalization |
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