MARIJUANA

or marihuana, drug obtained from the flowering tops, stems, and leaves of the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa (see hemp) or C. indica; the latter species can withstand colder climates. It is one of the most commonly used drugs in the world, following only caffeine, nicotine, and alcoholic beverages in popularity. In the United States, where it is usually smoked, it also has been called weed, grass, pot, or reefer.

The Plant

C. sativa grows as a common weed in many parts of the world, and drug preparations vary widely in potency according to climate, cultivation, and method of preparation. C. indica is a shorter, hardier variety with rounded blue-green leaves, grown in Afghanistan for hashish. Most marijuanas grown in the United States since the late 1980s are hybrids of the two and yield a much more potent product than the marijuana of the past. The resin found on flower clusters and top leaves of the female plant is the most potent drug source and is used to prepare hashish, the highest grade of cannabis. The bud of the female plant, called sinsemilla, is the part most often smoked as marijuana.

The Drug

The effects of marijuana vary with its strength and dosage and with the state of mind of the user. Typically, small doses result in a feeling of well-being. The intoxication lasts two to three hours, but accompanying effects on motor control last much longer. High doses can cause tachycardia, paranoia, and delusions. Although it produces some of the same effects as hallucinogens like LSD and mescaline (heightened sensitivity to colors, shapes, music, and other stimuli and distortion of the sense of time), marijuana differs chemically and pharmacologically.

The primary active component of marijuana is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), although other cannabinol derivatives are also thought to be intoxicating. In 1988 scientists discovered receptors that bind THC on the membranes of nerve cells. They reasoned that the body must make its own THC-like substance. The substance, named anandamide, was isolated from pig brains in 1992 by an American pharmacologist, William A. Devane.

Marijuana lowers testosterone levels and sperm counts in men and raises testosterone levels in women. In pregnant women it affects the fetus and results in developmental difficulties in the child. There is evidence that marijuana affects normal maturation of preadolescent and adolescent users and that it affects short-term memory and comprehension. Heavy smokers often sustain lung damage from the smoke and contaminants. Regular use can result in dependence.

The Legalization Question

With the increase in the number of middle-class users in the 1960s and 1970s, there came a somewhat greater acceptance of the view that marijuana should not be considered in the same class as narcotics and that U.S. marijuana laws should be relaxed. The Drug Abuse Prevention Act of 1970 eased federal penalties somewhat, and 11 states decriminalized possession. However, in the late 1980s most states rewrote their drug laws and imposed stricter penalties. Opponents of easing marijuana laws have asserted that it is an intoxicant less controllable than alcohol, that our drug-using society does not need another widely used intoxicant, and that the United States should not act to weaken UN policies, which are opposed to the use of marijuana for other than possible medical purposes.

Medical Uses

Controversy surrounds the medical use of marijuana, with proponents saying it is useful for treating pain and the nausea and vomiting that are side effects of cancer chemotherapy and for restoring the appetite in people with AIDS. Although its active ingredient, THC (synthesized in 1966 and approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1985) is available by prescription in pill form, proponents say it is not as effective as the herb and is more expensive. A 1999 U.S.-government-sponsored study found that marijuana appeared beneficial for certain medical conditions. Because of the toxicity of marijuana smoke, however, it was hoped that further research might lead to development of new delivery systems, such as bronchial inhalers.

The Office of National Drug Control Policy has opposed legalization of the medical use of marijuana, citing law enforcement issues and the possibility that some would use it as a pretext to sell marijuana for nonmedical use. Proponents, disregarding the law, have set up networks for the distribution of the drug to people who they judge will be helped by it and continue to lobby for its legalization for medical use. Voters in several U.S. states have approved initiatives intended to legalize marijuana for medical uses, but whether such initiatives protect medical users with a prescription from federal prosecution is not clear. In 2003, however, a federal appeals court ruled that, with certain restrictions, such users are protected from prosecution. Another court ruling permits doctors to discuss medical use of marijuana with their patients but forbids them to help patients obtain the drug. A number of countries, including Canada, permit the medicinal use of the drug.

History of Marijuana Use

Marijuana has been used as an agent for achieving euphoria since ancient times; it was described in a Chinese medical compendium traditionally considered to date from 2737 b.c. Its use spread from China to India and then to N Africa and reached Europe at least as early as a.d. 500. A major crop in colonial North America, marijuana (hemp) was grown as a source of fiber. It was extensively cultivated during World War II, when Asian sources of hemp were cut off.

Marijuana was listed in the United States Pharmacopeia from 1850 until 1942 and was prescribed for various conditions including labor pains, nausea, and rheumatism. Its use as an intoxicant was also commonplace from the 1850s to the 1930s. A campaign conducted in the 1930s by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Narcotics (now the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs) sought to portray marijuana as a powerful, addicting substance that would lead users into narcotics addiction. It is still considered a "gateway" drug by some authorities. In the 1950s it was an accessory of the beat generation; in the 1960s it was used by college students and "hippies" and became a symbol of rebellion against authority.

The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 classified marijuana along with heroin and LSD as a Schedule I drug, i.e., having the relatively highest abuse potential and no accepted medical use. Most marijuana at that time came from Mexico, but in 1975 the Mexican government agreed to eradicate the crop by spraying it with the herbicide paraquat, raising fears of toxic side effects. Colombia then became the main supplier. The "zero tolerance" climate of the Reagan and Bush administrations (1981–93) resulted in passage of strict laws and mandatory sentences for possession of marijuana and in heightened vigilance against smuggling at the southern borders. The "war on drugs" thus brought with it a shift from reliance on imported supplies to domestic cultivation (particularly in Hawaii and California). Beginning in 1982 the Drug Enforcement Administration turned increased attention to marijuana farms in the United States, and there was a shift to the indoor growing of plants specially developed for small size and high yield. After over a decade of decreasing use, marijuana smoking began an upward trend once more in the early 1990s, especially among teenagers, but by the end of the decade this upswing had leveled off well below former peaks of use.

Bibliography

See J. S. Hochman, Marijuana and Social Evolution (1972); E. Marshal, Legalization (1988); M. S. Gold, Marijuana (1989); L. Grinspoon and B. J. Bakalar, Marijuana: The Forbidden Medicine (1995); publications of the Drugs & Crime Data Center and Clearinghouse, the Bureau of Justice Statistics Clearinghouse, and the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Marijuana  - 4294 results

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DOMESTIC MARIJUANA Recent Titles in Contributions in Criminology...Republic Nancy Travis Wolfe DOMESTIC MARIJUANA A NEGLECTED INDUSTRY Ralph...Data Weisheit, Ralph A. Domestic marijuana: a neglected industry / Ralph A. Weisheit...
...Inhalants and Solvents: Sniffing Disaster Marijuana: Mind-Altering Weed Methamphetamine...Screen ILLICIT AND MISUSED D RUGS MARIJUANA Mind-Altering Weed By E. J. Sanna...in-Publication Data Sanna, E. J. Marijuana : mind-altering weed / by E. J. Sanna...
understanding MARIJUANA understanding MARIJUANA a new look at the scientific evidence Mitch Earleywine...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Earleywine, Mitchell. Understanding marijuana : a new look at the scientific evidence / Mitch Earleywine...
Marijuana EDITED BY ERICH GOODE Did George Washington smoke...new students of this monu mental social issue. Marijuana seeks to bring to the reader the whole configuration...many of their elders. The book describes the history of marijuana use, how the drug is distributed in this country, the...
The Marijuana Smokers THE MARIJUANA SMOKERS ERICH GOODE Basic Books, Inc., Publishers N...probed by Professor Goode, rages on. On the one hand, the use of marijuana seems to be spreading in ever-widening circles, while, on the...
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The future of medical marijuana: should the states grow their own...with M-16s (1) burst into a medical marijuana hospice in Santa Cruz, California...organizing an event to distribute medical marijuana on the steps of City Hall. (5) Mayor...
Assessing the Relationship between Marijuana Availability and Marijuana Use: A Legal and Sociological Comparison between...United States and the Netherlands have antithetical marijuana control policies. The United States laws criminalize...
Marijuana on the Ballot by JAMES R. MCDONOUGH WHILE IT HAS LONG BEEN CLEAR that chemical compounds found in the marijuana plant offer potential for medical use, smoking the raw...that have advocated the use of a smoked plant -- the marijuana leaf -- for "treating" an unspecified number of ailments...
Demand for Marijuana, Alcohol and Tobacco: Participation...and Background The consumption of marijuana, alcohol and tobacco has long been identified...Glied, 2002). Issues relating to marijuana consumption are, to some extent, different...
Medicinal Marijuana and Palliative Care: Carving a Liberty...Monson was a licensed user of medicinal marijuana, and thus her use of the cannabis plants...primary caregivers who obtain and use marijuana for medical purposes upon the recommendation...
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Q: Is the governments war against marijuana justified as public policy by...target a few winnable issues, like medical marijuana and the repeal of mandatory minimums...National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML, told an Emory University...
An End to Marijuana Prohibition: The Drive to Legalize Picks Up...Americans supported decriminalizing and even legalizing marijuana. Seventy-two percent say that for simple marijuana possession, people should not be incarcerated but...
Marijuana and the Law. by Eric Schlosser The vigorous enforcement of marijuana laws has resulted in four million arrests since the early...two-part article During the 1980s criminal penalties for marijuana offenses were made much tougher, at both the state and...
Weed Whackers - the Anti-Marijuana Forces, and Why Theyre Wrong...sooner proposed tougher penalties for marijuana possession than a third of her fellow...shadow-cabinet ministers admitted to past marijuana use. Widdecome immediately had to...
Dispensing Medical Marijuana: Some Halachic Parameters. by...potential health benefits and risks of marijuana and its cannabinoid compounds. Their...research into physiological effects of marijuanas constituent cannabinoids and their...
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Marijuana Project Parties with Barr; Libertarians Open Convention...yesterday with a tea-and-cookies reception hosted by the Marijuana Policy Project featuring none other than Mr. Barr, the...the District of Columbia from voting to permit medical-marijuana use and became a lightning rod for drug-legalization...
P12-M Marijuana Uprooted in Far-Flung Kalinga Areas...and DEXTER SEE CAMP DANGWA, Benguet - Marijuana plants worth over R12 million were uprooted...the destruction of 20,000 fully grown marijuana plants and 200,000 marijuana seedlings...
DEA Raids Medical Marijuana Centers. Byline: Jerry Seper, THE WASHINGTON...Washington state have raided several medical marijuana distribution centers, seizing thousands of pounds of the drug, marijuana-laced edibles, weapons and cash. There were...
PNP, PDEA Teams Uproot P2-M Marijuana Plants in Sarangani. Byline...anti-drugs teams uprooted at least 40,000 marijuana plants valued at P2 million from...officials in torching the uprooted marijuana plants in-front of the town hall...
Pro-Marijuana Ad Pushes Pot as Budget Fix. Byline: Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO u A pro-marijuana group launched a television advertisement...airing Wednesday and paid for by the Marijuana Policy Project, features a retired 58-year-old...
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encyclopedia articles on: Marijuana  - 16 results

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MARIJUANA or marihuana, drug obtained from the flowering...Mexico, Paraguay, and the United States are the top marijuana-producing nations worldwide. C. indica is a shorter...blue-green leaves, grown in Afghanistan for hashish. Most marijuanas grown in the United States since the late 1980s are...
...the United States population has tried marijuana, cocaine, or other illicit drugs. By...and 82% has tried alcoholic beverages. Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug...substances include cocaine and crack, marijuana and hashish , heroin , hallucinogenic...
...plants grown in hot, moist climates. Marijuana , a cheaper and less potent substance...plants grown in cooler climates. Like marijuana, hashish is usually smoked, but in a...States with no accepted medical use. Like marijuana, its active ingredient is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol...
MARIHUANA see marijuana . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
CANNABIS see hemp ; marijuana . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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