Big Marijuana — Lessons from Big Tobacco. Richter, K. P. & Levy, S. New England Journal of Medicine, 0(0):10--19. Paper doi abstract bibtex The United States is divided over the legalization of marijuana. Arguments in favor include protection of individual rights, elimination of criminal sentencing for minor offenses, collection of tax revenue, and elimination of the black market. Counterarguments include the possible escalation of use, adverse mental and physical health effects, and potential medical and social costs. Some steps have already been taken to reduce harsh and racially biased sentencing. There is growing support in Congress to eliminate federal mandatory minimums for drug offenses, and 19 states have either decriminalized or eliminated jail time for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Furthermore, 21 . . .
@article{ richter_big_????,
title = {Big Marijuana — Lessons from Big Tobacco},
volume = {0},
issn = {0028-4793},
url = {http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1406074},
doi = {10.1056/NEJMp1406074},
abstract = {The United States is divided over the legalization of marijuana. Arguments in favor include protection of individual rights, elimination of criminal sentencing for minor offenses, collection of tax revenue, and elimination of the black market. Counterarguments include the possible escalation of use, adverse mental and physical health effects, and potential medical and social costs. Some steps have already been taken to reduce harsh and racially biased sentencing. There is growing support in Congress to eliminate federal mandatory minimums for drug offenses, and 19 states have either decriminalized or eliminated jail time for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Furthermore, 21 . . .},
number = {0},
urldate = {2014-06-17TZ},
journal = {New England Journal of Medicine},
author = {Richter, Kimber P. and Levy, Sharon},
pmid = {24918955},
pages = {10--19}
}
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