Attitudes towards Cannabis Research

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Cannabis,Research,Attitudes

The author discusses the various attitudes he encounters when he tells people that he researches cannabis, highlighting the ignorance surrounding the plant and the misconceptions people have about it.

When I tell people that I research cannabis, I sometimes receive a furtive gesture that implies and presumes: “We’re both stoners!”, as if two members of a secret society have met. Other times, I receive looks of concern. “You don’t want to be known as the guy who studies marijuana,” a professional colleague once counselled.

Lastly, some respond with blank stares: “Why do academics spend time on such frivolous topics?” I’ve learned that all these attitudes reflect ignorance about the plant, which few people have learned about except through popular media or their own experiences with it. I study cannabis, but I’m more broadly interested in how people and plants interact. I’ve studied plants from perspectives ranging between ecology and cultural history, including obscure plants and more widely known ones, such as the African baobab. Cannabis is in another category, being one of the world’s most famous and widespread plants. Yet it’s the one for which people most commonly question my research motivation

Cannabis Research Attitudes Ignorance Misconceptions Plants Interaction

 

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