Cannabis Nation:
Control and Consumption
in Britain, 1928-2008
by James H. Mills (Author)
Cannabis has never been
a more controversial substance in Britain. Over the last decade it has been
reclassified twice, has been the subject of a range of official investigations
and scientific studies, and has provoked media campaigns and all manner of
political gesturing. Cannabis Nation seeks to understand this period by placing
it back into the historical context of the long-term story of cannabis and the
British. It takes up where its predecessor, Cannabis Britannica: Empire, Trade,
and Prohibition, 1800-1928 (2003) left off.
James Mills traces the
story back into the last days of the Empire, when Britain controlled
cannabis-consuming societies in Asia and Africa even while there was little
taste for the drug back home. He shows that cannabis was caught up in control
regimes established to deal with opium and cocaine consumption, while it fell
out of favour as a medicine. As such, when migration after the Second World War
brought the Empire's cannabis-consumers to the UK, they faced hostile attitudes
towards their favourite intoxicant.
From that time on a
growing number of groups and agencies took an interest in cannabis. Ambitious
bureaucrats in the Home Office saw in it an opportunity to draw resources in to
the Drugs Branch, while the police began to use laws related to it for a number
of other purposes. Experts ranging from pharmacologists to sociologists formed
committees on the subject, and its association with colonial migrants lent it
an exotic aura to the politically-minded of the 1960s counter-culture and the
working-class youth of Britain's inner cities. Since the 1970s governments were
content to devolve responsibility to the police for working out the best legal
approach to the substance, and efforts to wrestle this back from them proved
difficult a decade ago. Cannabis Nation considers all of these trends, details
the often eccentric characters that have shaped them, and concludes that
current positions and arguments on cannabis can only be properly assessed if their
historical origins are clearly understood.