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Marijuana and Tolerance: Revisiting Becker's Sources of Control

NCJ Number
172342
Journal
Deviant Behavior Volume: 18 Issue: 2 Dated: (April-June 1997) Pages: 103-124
Author(s)
A D Hathaway
Date Published
1997
Length
22 pages
Annotation
This article updates earlier work on marijuana use and social control.
Abstract
Recreational marijuana use has, in the past 4 decades, evolved from a practice prevalent only within certain marginalized groups or subcultures, to one broadly established throughout modern Western culture. With this diffusion, particularly among the middle classes, use of the drug has become increasingly tolerated by law enforcers as well as the general public. Despite continuing prohibition, significant numbers of otherwise conventional adults persist in using marijuana on a regular basis. Based on in-depth interviews with 30 middle-class adult users, this article updates Howard Becker's early work on marijuana use and social control. As tolerable deviance, marijuana use has become individualized and is now commonly found outside the subcultural groups with which it was once associated. Accordingly, the article argues, the practice should be studied at a more personal level, as a practical, routine component of people's everyday lives. References

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