Aim: This article traces recent developments in Danish cannabis policy, by exploring how "cannabis use" is problematised and governed within different co-existing policy areas. Background: Recently, many countries have changed their cannabis policy by introducing medical cannabis and/or by moving toward legalisation or decriminalisation. Researchers have thus argued that traditional notions of cannabis as a singular and coherent object, are being replaced by perspectives that highlight the multiple ontological character of cannabis. At the same time, there is growing recognition that drug policy is not a unitary phenomenon, but rather composed by multiple "policy areas", each defined by particular notions of what constitutes the relevant policy "problem". Design: We draw on existing research, government reports, policy papers and media accounts of policy and policing developments. Results: We demonstrate how Danish cannabis policy is composed of different co-existing framings of cannabis use; as respectively a social problem, a problem of deviance, an organised crime problem, a health- and risk problem and as a medical problem. Conclusion: While the international trend seems to be that law-and-order approaches are increasingly being replaced by more liberal approaches, Denmark, on an overall level, seems to be moving in the opposite direction: Away from a lenient decriminalisation policy and towards more repressive approaches. We conclude that the prominence of discursive framings of cannabis use as a "problem of deviance" and as "a driver of organised crime", has been key to this process.
Aim: This article traces recent developments in Danish cannabis policy, by exploring how "cannabis use" is problematised and governed within different co-existing policy areas. Background: Recently, many countries have changed their cannabis policy by introducing medical cannabis and/or by moving toward legalisation or decriminalisation. Researchers have thus argued that traditional notions of cannabis as a singular and coherent object, are being replaced by perspectives that highlight the multiple ontological character of cannabis. At the same time, there is growing recognition that drug policy is not a unitary phenomenon, but rather composed by multiple "policy areas", each defined by particular notions of what constitutes the relevant policy "problem". Design: We draw on existing research, government reports, policy papers and media accounts of policy and policing developments. Results: We demonstrate how Danish cannabis policy is composed of different co-existing framings of cannabis use; as respectively a social problem, a problem of deviance, an organised crime problem, a health- and risk problem and as a medical problem. Conclusion: While the international trend seems to be that law-and-order approaches are increasingly being replaced by more liberal approaches, Denmark, on an overall level, seems to be moving in the opposite direction: Away from a lenient decriminalisation policy and towards more repressive approaches. We conclude that the prominence of discursive framings of cannabis use as a "problem of deviance" and as "a driver of organised crime", has been key to this process.
Since the early 1960s, production, distribution, and purchase of cannabis has been
prohibited in most parts of the world. Recently, however, changes in cannabis
policy have occurred as more countries are introducing medical cannabis and/or are
moving towards different forms of legalisation and/or decriminalisation of
cannabis use (e.g., Decorte
et al., 2020; Fischer et al., 2015; Grucza et al., 2018). In the Nordic
countries, changes in cannabis policy has occurred in Denmark with the
introduction of a trial with medical cannabis in 2018 (Nygaard-Christensen & Frank,
2019), and is likely to happen in Norway, where decriminalisation of
possession and use of cannabis is under consideration (Marthinussen, 2018). Against this
background, Duff
(2016) has argued that traditional understandings of cannabis as a
singular object with a universal essence, are gradually being replaced by
perspectives that highlight the multiple ontological character of cannabis.
Cannabis can, for instance, mean different things in different contexts (e.g.,
“medicine”, “illegal drug”, “recreational substance”, “unhealthy drug”). At the
same time, there is today also growing recognition that drug policy is not a
unitary and coherent phenomenon. Instead researchers suggest that the drug policy
field is best understood as composed of multiple “policy areas”, including, for
example, control policy, treatment policy, prevention policy, social policy and
labour market policy (Ritter
et al., 2016). Each of these are defined by particular, but also
overlapping, policy measures, governmental rationalities and material-discursive
constructions of what constitutes the relevant policy “problem” (Benoit, 2003; Houborg & Bjerge,
2011). From this perspective, drug policies are not seen as
straightforward responses to objective or pre-existing problems “out there”.
Rather, different drug policy areas and measures are active in the
creation of drug problems as particular types of problems
(Houborg, Bjerge et
al., 2020; Lancaster et al., 2017). For instance, while drug control policy is
likely to address individuals as legal subjects and view the “problem” of drug use
through a criminal justice lens, treatment, prevention and harm reduction
addresses individuals as social, psychological and biological subjects (Houborg, 2010), and
hence understand the “problem” of drug use in this light. Inspired by this line of
thinking, this article explores recent developments in Danish cannabis policy, by
providing insights into the multiple and co-existing discursive policy frames
through which the issue of cannabis use is today problematised
and governed in Denmark.Theoretically, we draw on framing analysis, holding that policy positions rest on
frames consisting of underlying structures of belief and perceptions. More
specifically, we draw on the work of Rein and Schön (1993), who argue that
policy actors construct and make sense of policy issues through a process of
discursive “framing” which is defined as “a way of selecting, organising,
interpreting, and making sense of a complex reality to provide guideposts for
knowing, analysing, persuading, and acting” (p. 146). Within this framework, the
complementary processes of naming and framing define what is problematic about an
issue, and suggest what cause of action would be appropriate to address the
“problem” (Duke & Kolind,
2020). Importantly, framing analysis also holds that while different
framings can co-exist, some framings might, over time, develop to become more
dominant than others (Thom
& MacGregor, 2020). In our analysis, we use this perspective to
outline how the different areas that make up Danish cannabis policy are today
composed of different co-existing framings of the cannabis use “problem”, as
respectively a “social problem”, a “problem of deviance”, an “organised crime
problem”, a “health and risk problem” and a “medical problem”. We also show how
shifting framings of the cannabis use problem has been coupled by changes in
understandings of cannabis users. Importantly, while the international trend seems
to be that law-and-order framings are increasingly being subordinated to more
social- and health-based framings of cannabis use, resulting in shifts from
prohibition to more liberal cannabis policies, we show how Denmark, on an overall
level, seems to be moving in the opposite direction: away from a lenient
decriminalisation policy and towards more repressive approaches. We argue that
control policy agendas, and particularly the growing prominence of two discursive
framings, constructing cannabis use as respectively a “problem of deviance” and as
“a driver of organised crime”, has been key to this process.In the analysis, we draw on key findings from existing research on cannabis/drug use,
policy, markets and prevention in Denmark, including our own prior studies on
Danish cannabis and other drug policy discourses (Nygaard-Christensen & Frank, 2019;
Søgaard & Nielsen,
forthcoming). The analysis also draws on key government reports,
policy papers and media accounts of policy and policing developments. The
government reports and policy papers include reports from the Danish Health
Authority (da: Sundhedsstyrelsen), the police, the Danish
Medicines Agency (da: Lægemiddelsstyrelsen) and key government
policy programmes such as The Fight against Drugs (Government, 2003a).
These were retrieved from open public and ministerial homepages. Parliamentary
debates and law proposals have been retrieved from the Parliament’s homepage
available to the public. Media searches have been made in the database Infomedia
that contains all national and local newspapers. Searches have been made
especially for medical cannabis policy, drug policy, law enforcement, youth and
cannabis, organised crime, cannabis and health, and cannabis and prevention from
2000–2020. Media accounts and parliamentary debates have been subjected to content
and thematic analyses (cf. Braun & Clarke, 2006). This included an initial phase of
familiarising ourselves with the data, followed by a process of inductively
identifying key patterns and themes, and how these combined to form overarching
themes. Aside from identifying key themes, the content analysis also involved a
process of examining and mapping underlying ideas, assumptions, and
conceptualisations about cannabis/cannabis use, as these were articulated in media
and parliamentary debates. The final stages of the analysis involved a process of
moving back and forward between the research literature and the data set
(government reports, policy papers, media accounts and parliamentary debates), to
produce an outline of the key, and sometimes competing, discursive framings
underpinning Danish cannabis policy debates and governmental initiatives. In the
following, we present our analysis of the different co-existing framings of
cannabis use, starting out with cannabis as a “social problem”. While these
framings co-exist, they did not emerge at the same time. The analysis is both
organised in relation to how cannabis is framed as a problem, but also
chronologically in relation to when a framing emerged.
Drug use as a social problem
Danish drug policy, and cannabis policy in particular, has over the last four
decades changed from a liberal to a more repressive policy (Frank, 2008).
Even though production, distribution, purchase and possession of cannabis
have been prohibited by law since 1955, Denmark has been seen as having a
liberal drug policy from 1969 and until the beginning of 2000s, due to an
attorney general decree (Laursen & Jepsen, 2002).
During this period, cannabis use was largely framed as a social problem
associated with bohemian lifestyles, an alternative youth (and hippie)
culture that rebelled against established institutions, and with socially
disadvantaged living conditions for certain segments of the population
(Houborg et al.,
2008; Houborg & Vammen, 2012). This period became the foundation
of a drug policy that took drug use to be on par with other social problems.
Therefore, this problem could best be addressed through social policies and
social expertise, including drug prevention and treatment (Houborg, 2010).
The framing of cannabis and other drug use as a social problem also came to
influence Danish criminal justice policy on drugs. In 1968, the Danish
government proposed to increase the legal sentencing for professional drug
trafficking and drug dealing. While supporters argued that increased legal
punishment was needed to avoid Denmark becoming a “magnet” for international
drug traders, critics argued that increased criminalisation of professional
drug traders was likely to have a “rub off” effect on the sentencing of
minor drug offences, which would lead to increased criminalisation of young
people experimenting with cannabis (Houborg et al., 2008; Storgaard,
2000). In 1969, the parliament reached a compromise. While deciding
to amend the Penal Code (§191), thereby increasing the penalty for
professional drug dealing and trafficking, a majority of the parliament made
it a condition of the passing of the Bill that the Attorney General
instructed the police and prosecutors not to charge drug users for
possession of illegal drugs for personal use. Such cases should be settled
with an administrative or court caution (Frank, 2008). For other drugs
than cannabis, this involved first-time offences, while for cannabis it also
involved repeat offences. The instruction thus created a de facto
decriminalisation of possession of all illicit drugs for personal use. In
this way, a dual track policy was enacted that not only distinguished
between cannabis (a “soft” drug) and other (“harder”) drugs, but also
between drug suppliers and users (Storgaard, 2000). While the
former were framed as criminals to be met with law enforcement, the latter
were framed as social clients, who were best managed and re-integrated into
society through welfare means such as treatment, education, social services
and prevention (Houborg
et al., 2008). Hence, until the end of the 1990s, Danish drug
policy was dominated by an understanding of cannabis use as relatively
harmless and law enforcement remained lenient on cannabis users (cf. Storgaard,
2000).
Cannabis use as a criminal offence and deviant choice
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, Danish drug policy debates were
characterised by intensive discussions about youth culture and drugs (Houborg, 2010).
These debates were spurred by international research describing how the
status of cannabis use was changing from a limited subcultural phenomenon to
becoming a more prevalent and “normalised” part of mainstream youth cultures
(Parker et al.,
1995). During the late 1990s, the “normalisation thesis” gained
momentum in Danish political discourses (Houborg, 2010), as comparative
survey studies showed that young Danes’ use of cannabis had increased, and
that they had a higher cannabis use rate than young people in most other
European countries (Hibell et al., 2000; Hibell et al., 1997).
Contributing to the impression that use of cannabis and other drugs was
becoming more normalised in Denmark, was the publication of a report by the
Danish Health
Authority (2000), which concluded that young Danes had
developed a more liberal attitude towards illegal drugs. Aside from changes
in the prevalence rate, and in young people’s acclaimed attitudes towards
cannabis, research on the short- and long-term negative cognitive effects of
cannabis use also started to challenge prior understandings of cannabis use
as harmless (Ashton,
2001). In Denmark, these developments led to a heightened
public concern with young people’s use of cannabis and other drugs, at times
bordering a moral panic (Houborg, 2010).In 2003, the Liberal-Conservative government (da: Venstre &
Konservative Folkeparti) launched a new drug policy programme
called The Fight against Drugs (Government, 2003a). The new
programme was in part a policy response to the increases in youth drug use.
However, as outlined by Houborg et al. (2020b) it also reflected a general shift
towards more morally based neo-conservative “law and order” crime policies
in Denmark (see Balvig,
2005). The Fight against Drugs initiated a
change in Danish drug control policy (Frank, 2008; Houborg et al.,
2008), and it addressed different areas directly relevant to
cannabis policy, one of which was use and small-scale selling of cannabis.
Rather than framing cannabis (and other drug) use as a symptom of social
problems and societal changes, and cannabis and other drug users as subjects
in need of help, the new policy programme framed youth drug use as a problem
rooted in a new “youth culture”, allegedly characterised by
individualisation, a lack of moral restraint, a lack of respect for the law,
experimentation, consumerism and weekend intoxication in nightlife or other
contexts defined by excessive alcohol use (Government, 2003a; see also
Chiefs of Police,
2002; Danish Health Authority, 2000; Measham & Brain, 2005).
Within this policy discourse, especially young, but also recreational drug
users in general were framed as deviant but rational consumers, and use of
drugs such as cannabis, ecstasy, cocaine and amphetamines was seen as the
result of flawed consumer choices (Houborg, 2010; Houborg, Søgaard, &
Mogensen, 2020b). The Fight against Drugs thus
emphasised that in order to change young people’s attitudes towards cannabis
and other drugs, it was important to send a “clear signal” that this kind of
behaviour was unacceptable and would have legal consequences. Couched in the
rhetoric of “zero-tolerance”, “deterrence” and “respect for the law” (Frank, 2008),
the new drug policy led to a legislative amendment in 2004 of the Law on
Euphoria-Inducing Substances (LES) – the law used to sanction drug
possession and small-scale sales – which re-introduced penalisation of all
personal possession of illicit drugs. The amendments overruled the Attorney
General’s instruction from 1969 and meant that police should now issue fines
as default for possession of cannabis instead of the former practice of
issuing formal warnings as sanctions. In 2007, the fines for possession were
increased. Aside from imposing a re-criminalisation of possession of
cannabis and other drugs, the new policy also resulted in a remarkable
quantitative increase in police enforcement intensity of the LES. From 2003
to 2005, there was a 35% increase in the enforcement of the LES (Moeller,
2020).We thus see how cannabis use during this particular area of Danish cannabis
policy was framed as a “criminal offence” and a “deviant choice”. In the
following, we illustrate how growing concerns with gangs and organised crime
also came to inform the new “cannabis control paradigm” (Møller, 2008, p.
124), as well as the framing of cannabis use and the governance of cannabis
users.
Cannabis use as an organised crime problem
While the former framing of cannabis use differentiated between users and
dealers/organised crime, we have recently seen a framing particularly of
young and recreational drug users as complicit in organised crime (Søgaard & Nielsen,
forthcoming). The discursive framing of cannabis users as
complicit in organised crime is part of longer process. Since the early
1960s, concerns about organised crime have figured centrally in Danish
control policy (Houborg
& Vammen, 2012). As aforementioned, in order to avoid
Denmark becoming a “magnet” for international drug traders, the parliament
in 1969 amended the Penal Code (§191), thereby increasing the penalty for
professional drug trafficking from two to six years of imprisonment. In
1975, the maximum penalty was raised to ten years (Storgaard, 2000). Later on, in
1982, the Copenhagen Police released a report describing how outlaw bikers
were involved in the cannabis market at the Freetown Christiania, where the
largest open cannabis market in Denmark was based (Copenhagen Police, 1982). The
report claimed that the selling of cannabis was becoming more professionally
organised, and that drug trading was the key economic basis of outlaw
bikers. These ideas gained prominence in public debates during the 1990s,
especially during and after the “Big Nordic Biker War”. From the mid-1990s,
Danish cannabis policy gradually became integrated into a larger body of
“organised crime policies” (Cornils & Greve, 2004, p.
853), resulting in a tightening of legislative controls. These included the
passing of the so-called “Pusher Law” in 1996 and the “Hash Club Law” in
2001 (Laursen &
Jepsen, 2002). While the former increased the penalty for
small-scale drug selling, the latter enabled police to use administrative
powers to close down premises where cannabis (or other drugs) were suspected
of being sold, and to ban specific individuals from frequenting these
premises.The Fight against Drugs policy also highlighted
criminalisation and intensified policing as the best ways to combat
cannabis-related organised crime, and argued that close links existed
between the cannabis trade at Christiania and organised crime (Government,
2003a). Aside from outlining how the police were to use supply
reduction tactics, involving arrests of sellers and backers, the policy
paper also outlined that police should start making more active use of
demand reduction tactics as a means of combating the organised cannabis
trade at Christiania. A later action plan (Government, 2003b), specified
that the police should increase its targeting of “the recipients” of
cannabis (i.e., the cannabis users) at Christiania, as this would make it
more difficult for drug traders to sell their commodities.In the media, then Minister of Justice, Lene Espersen, explained that the
police had been instructed to target the “buyers” frequenting Pusher Street
at Christiania, because this would “result in a situation where the buyers
will no longer find it attractive to go to Christiania to source hash”
(
). The Minister thus
invoked a notion of the cannabis user as a rational actor who could be
deterred into conformity. However, rather than describing the rational
cannabis user as a consumer, as was the case in debates
about the new youth culture of intoxication (previous section), cannabis
users were now described as “recipients of cannabis”, “buyers”, “customers”
and as the “customer-base” for criminals (
;
). As argued by Søgaard and Nielsen
(forthcoming), this change of vocabulary was indicative of the
emergence of a new dominant discourse in which cannabis users were
increasingly framed as “market actors”, whose “demand” for drugs constituted
the economic basis for the criminal drug trade. While Danish drug policy had
traditionally rested on a dual track policy that distinguished between drug
suppliers and drug users (Storgaard, 2000), this new
policy discourse not only dissolved this distinction, it also framed drug
users, in their capacity as economic customers, as (indirectly) complicit in
drug-related organised crime (Søgaard & Nielsen,
forthcoming).The new policy discourse resulted in an intensified police targeting of
cannabis users at Christiania, at times referred to as a buyer-directed
“stress strategy” (
). During the
following years, this tactic spread to the rest of the country where it led
to intensified police targeting of (recreational) cannabis and other drug
users. As an indication of this, research shows how police districts outside
of Copenhagen came to drive the overall increase in the enforcement
intensity of the Law on Euphoria-Inducing Substances from 2011 to 2017
(Moeller,
2020). In Copenhagen and elsewhere, police have often drawn on
a discourse that frames young and recreational drug users as the economic
basis for organised drug trading, to publicly justify their intensified
targeting of users (Søgaard & Nielsen, forthcoming). We thus see a framing of
cannabis use as an “organised crime problem”, where cannabis users are
framed as drivers of organised crime.Alongside policy areas framing cannabis as a social problem, a deviant
choice/criminal offence, and as an organised crime problem, recently,
another framing to promote cannabis as a drug to be legalised has
emerged.
Debating cannabis legalisation: Organised crime or health problem?
While the early 2000s were characterised by relative political consensus about
cannabis policy, 2009 marked a turning point where a push for legalisation
and/or alternative regulations of cannabis emerged (Houborg & Enghoff, 2018).
During 2008 and 2009, gang-related violence in Copenhagen reached a peak,
and the media regularly reported about how gang conflicts impacted on the
lives of ordinary citizens. As gang conflicts were believed to be rooted in
struggles over access to the lucrative cannabis market, in 2009
then-incumbent Lord Mayor of Copenhagen Frank Jensen from the Social
Democratic Party (da: Socialdemokratiet), suggested the
introduction of a three-year trial period where all cannabis users above 18
years of age should be able to purchase cannabis fully legally from
state-run outlets in Copenhagen (
). The then
Liberal-Conservative government immediately rejected the proposal.
Nevertheless, from 2009 onwards, references to organised crime and gang
conflicts have been central in political debates about cannabis legalisation
(Houborg &
Enghoff, 2018). Representatives from the municipality in
Copenhagen have played a key role in these debates. As outlined by Nygaard-Christensen and
Frank (2019), in January 2017, Copenhagen city council members
from the Social Democratic Party argued for a legalisation trial by
suggesting that legalisation would “remove some of the economy of the
criminal gangs who today profit from cannabis being illegal” (p. 6), and in
effect reduce gang-related violence. In recent years, this line of argument
has also been picked up by national politicians. In 2016, the Danish
Social-Liberal Party (da: Radikale Venstre) thus stated the
following in their proposal for a trial legalisation of cannabis:Importantly, advocates arguing for the need for a cannabis
policy reform have not challenged the discursive framing of cannabis users
as “market customers” whose purchasing practices feed organised crime.
Rather, their argument for cannabis legalisation seems to reinforce this
discourse. The solution reformers point to is, however, very different from
the punitive solution opted for by non-reformers (Søgaard & Nielsen,
forthcoming).The illegal cannabis sale at Christiania and elsewhere is
controlled by organised criminals and gangs (.). Therefore, it
is necessary to rethink and explore the possibilities for a
responsible and controlled way of legalising cannabis, so that
cannabis sale does not continue to remain a lucrative business
for organised criminals. (Cited in Nygaard-Christensen &
Frank, 2019, p. 8)While the cannabis reform movement has gained momentum, particularly at a
municipal level, there is still a majority in the Danish parliament against
legalisation (Nygaard-Christensen & Frank, 2019). That said, political
positions towards cannabis regulation are not static. The abovementioned
Danish Social-Liberal Party is an example of that. The party’s original
opposition to legalisation of cannabis changed following a shooting episode
at Christiania’s cannabis market in 2016, and the party now favours a trial
period for state-controlled legalisation of cannabis. Aside from arguing
that cannabis legalisation would reduce cannabis-related crime and violence,
reformers have also drawn on more economic arguments to promote the reform
agenda. This includes arguments that the policing of cannabis is very
costly, and that (police) resources could be better spent elsewhere, as well
as suggestions that a legal regulation of cannabis provision would generate
enormous tax-revenue for the state, instead of money flowing into the hands
of criminals (
). Lastly, reformers have
argued that by implementing a state-controlled system for legalised
cannabis, health professionals will be better able to identify and treat
individuals with problematic use of cannabis.In their rejection of reform proposals, opponents have drawn on a variety of
arguments. Opponents have, for instance, argued that legalisation was likely
to be counter-productive by incentivising criminals to shift to more serious
income-generating types of crimes (Parliament, 2009). Most notably,
opponents framed cannabis as a “health and risk problem”. With reference to
a report conducted by the Danish Health Authority, then Minister of Justice
Morten Bødskov, from the S-R-SF coalition government (da: Social
Demokratiet, Radikale Venstre, Socialistisk Folkeparti), for
instance argued that legalisation was problematic, because this would
increase the availability of cannabis in society, which would potentially
lead more young people to start using cannabis and have general negative
health consequences for the population (Municipality of Copenhagen,
2012). Similar health-based arguments were forwarded by the then
Health Minister Karen Ellemann, from the V-LA-K coalition government
(da: Venstre, Liberal Alliance, Det Konservative
Folkeparti), in her dismissal of a proposal for legalisation
in 2017. Instead, she argued that prohibition was the best way to prevent
young people from starting to use cannabis (Parliament, 2017a). We thus see
a two-fold framing of cannabis when legalisation is debated in Denmark. One
focus is on legalisation as a “solution” to organised crime and as an
economic gain for the state, while cannabis users are framed as “customers”.
The other opposes legalisation and frames cannabis use as a “health and risk
problem” while arguing that organised crime can best be combatted with
zero-tolerance policies. Cannabis framed as a “health and risk problem” is
also present in treatment and prevention policy areas, as we will show in
the following.
Cannabis use as a health and risk problem
Due to increased drug use prevalence rates and a growth in drug-related deaths,
Danish drug treatment saw a substantial addition of new resources in the
1990s and treatment became an area of intense political priority (Houborg et al.,
2008). As an indication of this, an amendment to the Danish
social legislation in 2003 obliged social authorities to initiate treatment
within 14 days after a person has requested treatment. The result was that
from 1996 to 2006 the number of persons in drug treatment almost tripled
(Houborg,
2010). In 2011, the Danish Health Authority estimated that
there were 33,000 drug “misusers” in Denmark, and due to renewed ways of
estimating drug use based on “primary” drug used, 11,000 of these were
estimated to be “cannabis misusers”. Changes in drug use in general and the
renewed ways of monitoring drug use in Denmark, also affected treatment
offers including the development and implementation of community-based
“cannabis treatment” (Kronbæk, 2012). In 2010, 2,634 were enrolled in a treatment
programme for cannabis misuse (Danish Health Authority, 2011),
and recent reports show that, especially young people, who have cannabis as
their primary substance of choice, constitute a growing proportion of the
total treatment population in Denmark (Danish Health Authority,
2017).Traditionally, young people’s use of cannabis has constituted a key issue in
Danish treatment and preventive drug policy measures. This was also evident
in The Fight against Drugs policy programme (Government,
2003a). While this very influential policy programme, as
mentioned above, gave voice to a new control policy which constituted
cannabis as an illegal drug (i.e., criminal problem), and cannabis users as
legal subjects (i.e., criminals), it also outlined the government’s ambition
to strengthen the treatment and prevention of drug “misuse” (Government,
2003a, p. 5). The policy paper thus also outlined a
health-based framing depicting cannabis as a harmful and unhealthy
substance. Within this framing, cannabis was emphasised as a substance that
is particularly risky for young people to use; a substance that can result
in severe health problems, in social problems and in learning disabilities,
but also that cannabis was a risky “transitory substance”, i.e., a
stepping-stone, to use of “harder drugs” (Government, 2003a, p. 22).
However, (young) cannabis users are not depicted as “sick”, as is the case
with heavy heroin users. Rather, use of cannabis is framed as a “risk
factor” (that can potentially result in sickness and other problems), and
young cannabis users are framed as subjects “at risk” (Kronbæk, 2012). Thus, based on a
deficit model, cannabis use is framed as a failing of the individual, and
“vulnerable” young people are identified as a group at “heightened risk” of
initiating a cannabis career, and therefore in need of preventive support
and help (Government,
2003a).This notion of “at risk” young people has also become a key driver of
school-based preventive measures aimed at educating the general youth
population, and of early intervention activities aimed at “high-risk youth”.
As part of this latter effort, the Danish Health Authority (2018)
has published much educational material aimed at enhancing frontline
workers’ (school teachers, youth workers, drug consultants, social workers
etc.) abilities to spot early warning signals. Partly fuelled by the
government’s ambition that 95 per cent of all Danish young people should
complete a secondary-level education, recent years have also seen a growing
concern with how use of cannabis can be a risk factor that increases young
people’s risk of school dropout (Andrade & Demant, 2018).
Within the field of education, young cannabis users are, however, not only
framed as “subjects-at-risk” but also as
“subjects-of-risk”. Most notably this has been
reflected in the growing dominance of a discursive framing depicting
cannabis using/intoxicated pupils as a risk to the construction of
productive learning environments, and as a risk to other pupils’ educational
development. In regard to the latter, cannabis use is framed as potentially
contagious, in that it is assumed that some pupils’ use of or intoxication
by cannabis can inspire other pupils to start using cannabis, in turn
enhancing the latter’s risk of school dropout (Sørensen et al., 2012). Against
this background, growing numbers of Danish secondary schools have adopted a
control policy rhetoric of “zero-tolerance”, and implemented tough-on-drugs
policies that seek to prevent cannabis use and intoxication on school
properties by use of exclusionary sanctions and deterrence (Sørensen et al.,
2012). While the Danish Health Authority (2018)
has warned that threats of expulsion can lead cannabis-using pupils to stay
away from classes, and that permanent expulsion from a particular education
setting can result in escalated cannabis use, tough-on-drugs approaches are
popular among secondary school leaders as these can be viewed as a means of
protecting the non-drug using majority. Media reports show that
“zero-tolerance” approaches at secondary schools include use of police
sniffer dogs to detect cannabis on school properties (
), and use of
urine, sweat or saliva tests, if a pupil is suspected to be
using/intoxicated by cannabis (
;
). Sanctions typically range
from permanent to temporary expulsion, the latter at times being conditional
on a pupil enrolling in a treatment programme (Sørensen et al., 2012). The
above is indicative both of the prevalence of a risk-based framing of
particularly young people’s use of cannabis, as well as of how framings and
governmental approaches originally developed within the control policy space
are today spreading to other policy spaces. Focusing on treatment and
prevention areas within Danish cannabis policy, we thus see a framing of
cannabis use as a health and risk problem.
Cannabis use as a medical problem
The most recent development in Danish cannabis policy has been the emergence of
a framing of cannabis and cannabis use as a medicine and a medical practice.
Thus, as described by Kvamme et al., the “boundaries between cannabis as an
illicit ‘drug’ and licit ‘medicine’” (2021, p. 2) have recently shifted in
Denmark. While cannabis has been framed as a medicine for decades
internationally (Fischer et al., 2015), this only occurred in Denmark when the
Danish Parliament in December 2017 approved a four-year trial period that
began in January 2018 (Nygaard-Christensen & Frank, 2019). Prior to the trial,
the synthetic cannabis product, Sativex, had been approved by the Danish
Medicines Agency in 2011, and could legally be prescribed to sclerosis
patients. The medical cannabis pilot programme allowed for a broader group
of patients to obtain medicinal cannabis legally, and for a broader variety
of products.The medical cannabis pilot programme was preceded by a spike in media reporting
on use of cannabis for medical purposes (Houborg & Enghoff, 2018).
Public and media attention has in large part been spurred by stakeholder
organisations, but also by citizen accounts describing how ill persons used
cannabis to relieve pains, and how they were frustrated that they had to buy
cannabis products illegally (
). In 2013, the left-wing
party Red-Green Alliance (da: Enhedslisten) made a proposal
for the decriminalisation of medicinal cannabis. However, the proposal was
rejected by the government on the grounds that cannabis for medical purposes
might be used recreationally and thus had a “potential for misuse” (Parliament,
2014). Moreover, then Minister for Health and Prevention Nick
Hækkerup warned against the risk that cannabis products for medical use
might “somehow end up at the illegal market” with the consequence that it
could contribute to a “de-facto legalisation” of cannabis (Parliament,
2014). Nevertheless, there was a renewed interest in international
experiences with medicinal cannabis regulation and a new proposal was made
in 2015, although this was also rejected.Outside of parliamentary debates, legalisation of medical cannabis was promoted
by key public figures. These included influential politicians such as Manu
Sareen, the former Minister of Children, Equality, Integration and Social
Relations, and Ritt Bjerregaard, the former Lord Mayor of Copenhagen.
Together with the actor Søs Egelind, Bjerregaard founded the organisation
“Cannabis Denmark” in 2017, with the aim of supporting research into medical
cannabis and promoting the idea of its legalisation. From 2015 onwards,
several parties began preparing the groundwork for a pilot programme where
selected patient groups would be able to receive medical cannabis prescribed
by a doctor (Parliament, 2017b).The 2018 trial period enabled the use of a broader range of products, which no
longer have to be approved by the Danish Medicines Agency. The patient group
eligible for medical cannabis included patients over the age of 18 years
with sclerosis, spinal cord injuries, patients undergoing chemotherapy, and
people with neuropathic pain. An additional requirement was that all
existing treatment options with approved medicinal products should be
exhausted before patients could receive prescriptions for medicinal
cannabis. While the trial has been contested within medical communities, and
particularly by doctors, by late 2019, some 4,300 patients had redeemed
prescriptions for medicinal cannabis products (Danish Health Data Authority,
2019). In the second half of 2020, two organisations, the
Medicinal Cannabis Industry and the trade organisation Medicinal Cannabis
Manufacturers merged and called for an evaluation of the trial that would
serve to clarify whether it could become permanent (
). They also lobbied
for increased political support in the hope that this would enable Danish
medicinal cannabis producers to become competitive in the international
market (
).The pilot programme constitutes an exception to the overall tendency towards a
zero-tolerance policy approach to cannabis in Denmark. Framing cannabis
(use) as legal for medical purposes involves a redefinition of both the
product and of the users. Based on research from Australia, Lancaster et al.
(2017) have shown how the construction of cannabis as a medical
product involves the demarcation of boundaries between recreational and
medical cannabis. This “setting apart” of medical cannabis from cannabis as
illicit drug is constantly made with reference to, as well as in opposition
to, recreational cannabis (Lancaster et al., 2017). The
constitution of “medicinal cannabis” thus relies on the “absent presence” of
recreational cannabis to define and shape what it is (Lancaster et al., 2017, p. 117).
In Denmark, the legalisation of medical cannabis has involved a similar
construction of users of medical cannabis as strictly and solely “patients”
deserving of protection from the illegal market and from the risks
associated with recreational use of illicit cannabis (Parliament, 2017b). In this way,
users of medical cannabis are framed as patients who are to be protected
from the risks associated with the use and purchase of recreational
cannabis. Importantly, the construction of medical cannabis as a
fundamentally distinct substance has also involved a conceptualisation of
users where “patients” are clearly distinguished from “recreational users”.
Moreover, constructing medical cannabis users as patients involves an active
silencing of the pleasures that might be involved when using “medical”
cannabis (Dahl &
Frank, 2011). The Danish Medicines Agency, for instance, warns
against pleasure and experiences of intoxication in their brief on medical cannabis:The strict framing and demarcation of boundaries between
“recreational cannabis users” and “patients”, and between cannabis as an
illicit drug vs. cannabis as a medical product, can arguably be said to have
been necessitated by the restrictive policy framework in which cannabis is
generally governed in Denmark. However, as shown by Kvamme et al. (2021), such a
clear demarcation is blurred in practice, where many people who use cannabis
for medical purposes continue to rely on the illegal market, including for
conditions outside of those targeted in the trial.As a rule, the Danish Medicines Agency does not think that it is a
desirable effect of a medical product that the patient achieves
intoxication. We normally perceive that to be an unintended side
effect. (Danish Medicines Agency, 2015, p. 12)
Conclusion
Drug policy is a complex field of research. A common approach often used to
understand drug policy complexities is to distinguish between different
policy areas that together make up a drug policy
(Houborg, Bjerge,
et al., 2020). Distinctions are, for instance, made between:
drug control policy, treatment policy, prevention policy and harm reduction
policy (Ritter et al.,
2016). A focus on any one of these areas in isolation will
throw light on partial aspects of a nation’s drug policy. However, as noted
by Ritter et al.
(2017), if we are to produce a more comprehensive
understanding, it requires that we take all of the different policy areas
into consideration as well as focus on the possible linkages between policy
areas. Inspired by this line of thinking, the present article has outlined
how Danish cannabis policy is composed by multiple co-existing policy areas,
including social policy, control policy, treatment and prevention policy,
and health policy. We have analysed how each of these policy areas is
characterised by specific, yet different, discursive framings of cannabis
use as a relevant policy problem, and how the different framings give rise
to different policy actions and solutions. In Danish cannabis policy,
cannabis is thus not a singular and coherent object, but rather multiple in
character, as are the solutions to the cannabis “problem”.In the analysis, we described how Danish cannabis policy from the 1960s to the
late 1990s was dominated by an understanding of cannabis as a relatively
harmless substance, and by a discursive framing of cannabis use as primarily
a social problem. This in turn gave rise to a lenient control policy on
cannabis users, and to a distinction between “users” and “dealers”, and
between cannabis (“soft”) and “hard” drugs. While the framing of cannabis as
a social problem remains, in recent decades it has largely been overtaken by
more control-oriented discourses that do not distinguish between users and
dealers, and that depict cannabis users as either rational but flawed
consumers, or as customers in an illicit market. Particularly the latter
framing has been coupled by condemning discourses that attribute blame and
responsibility for gang violence to cannabis (and other drug) users, as
these are depicted as the economic market basis for organised crime. The
shift towards a more repressive cannabis control policy has thus been
fuelled by discursive framings of cannabis use as a “problem of deviance”
and as a “driver of organised crime”. While the international trend seems to
be that prohibitionist approaches in cannabis control policy are
increasingly being replaced by more lenient approaches, including
decriminalisation and legalisation of cannabis, in relation to control
policy, Denmark is moving in the opposite direction.However, as noted above, cannabis policies are complex and sometimes
characterised by oppositional trends. As an illustration of this, we
outlined how Danish cannabis policy is also shaped by discursive framings of
cannabis use as a health and risk problem, and most recently as a medical
problem. While these latter framings can be seen as alternatives to the
dominant control policy framings, our analysis indicates that the
prevention, treatment, and medical cannabis policy areas are today also
heavily influenced by lines of thinking and approaches originating in the
control policy area. In the analysis, for instance, we described how some
domains of the preventive policy area are increasingly influenced by
discursive depictions of young cannabis users as
risks-to-others, and by preventive approaches based on
deterrence and punishment, such as exclusion from educational institutions.
Furthermore, the recent introduction of the pilot programme for medical
cannabis rests on a clear discursive distinction between, on the one hand,
the sick and deserving “patient”, who uses cannabis strictly for pain
relief, and, on the other, the “flawed recreational user”, who uses cannabis
for pleasure. In Denmark, the introduction of a medical cannabis trial has
thus not fundamentally altered the general position of cannabis in Danish
policy (debates), as, for instance, illustrated by the parliament’s recent
rejections of legalisation proposals. Due to the fact that most cannabis
policy areas in Denmark are today coloured by repressive control thinking,
discussions and initiatives aimed at harm reduction, which are currently
prevalent in relation to, for example, heroin users (Houborg & Frank, 2014; Thylstrup et al.,
2019), are also almost non-existent in relation to cannabis and
cannabis users.How Danish cannabis policy will develop in the future is difficult to predict.
Internationally, trends towards decriminalisation or legalisation follow the
longstanding differentiation between “soft” and “hard” drugs. Whether Danish
cannabis policy will change back to differentiate between “soft” and “hard”
drugs after almost two decades with a repressive control policy is difficult
to say. Importantly, however, while we see changes in some countries towards
decriminalisation or legalisation, most countries still have a rather
repressive control policy towards cannabis, and other countries aside from
Denmark go against liberalisation trends. The Netherlands, for example, have
traditionally had the most lenient cannabis policy in Europe, but in recent
decades they have slowly tightened their cannabis policy. While Dutch
cannabis policy is still “liberal” or “lenient”, it is today far from the
liberal cannabis policy that was established in the 1970s (van de Bunt &
Mueller, 2021). How national cannabis policies develop, and
hence differ, does not only go one way from repressive to lenient, but must
be understood in relation to the point of departure of how lenient or
repressive the control policy has been in the past. This also goes for
Denmark, which, in a Nordic comparative perspective, traditionally has had a
very lenient cannabis policy (Laursen & Jepsen, 2002;
Storgaard,
2000). While Danish cannabis control policy in recent decades
has moved in a more repressive direction, this does not mean that Denmark
has taken a lead position in terms of cannabis control intensity. Measured
by the number of cannabis seizures relative to the population size, Sweden
and Norway still display the highest enforcement intensity in the region.
The shift towards a more control-oriented approach in Denmark is, however,
indicative of a convergence in control intensity between the Nordic
countries, with Denmark becoming more similar to Sweden and Norway (Moeller,
2019).With the legalisation and decriminalisation tendencies elsewhere, including
Norway in a Nordic context, and with the easy access to information about
cannabis online, it might in the future be difficult for Danish authorities
to uphold the current dominant risk, harm and organised crime perspective in
Danish cannabis policy as the dominant legitimate perspective. Several
opinion polls have for instance shown that a small majority of the Danish
population is now in favour of a more lenient cannabis policy (
;
). There thus seems to be a divide
between national politicians and their constituents. In this perspective,
discussions not only about alternative regulations of cannabis, but also
about how to differentiate between problematic and unproblematic use of
cannabis (e.g., in relation to mode of administration, frequency of use,
cannabis potency), as is today done with the use of alcohol (Danish Health
Authority, 2021), seems important. These discussions could
favourably be conducted in a harm reduction policy framing and would add to
the present cannabis policy areas in Denmark.
Authors: Richard A Grucza; Mike Vuolo; Melissa J Krauss; Andrew D Plunk; Arpana Agrawal; Frank J Chaloupka; Laura J Bierut Journal: Int J Drug Policy Date: 2018-07-17