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Articles

Cannabis use under prohibitionism – the interplay between motives, contexts and subjects

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Pages 368-376 | Received 08 May 2019, Accepted 20 Nov 2019, Published online: 03 Dec 2019
 

Abstract

A key question in drugs research is why people use psychoactive substances. Diverse motives such as boredom, habit, and pain relief have served as explanations, but little is known about how adult cannabis users motivate their use in prohibitionist policy contexts, like Sweden. The aim is to explore what motives a sample of adult Swedish cannabis users refer to when they give meaning to their use. We ask: what aspects of cannabis use (e.g. drug effects, individual characteristics and social contexts) are emphasized in their accounts, and how are such aspects combined to describe motives and justify use? In this study, motives are perceived as culturally situated action, and our analysis is based on online text messages (n = 238) and interviews (n = 12). Participants emphasized either the characteristics of the use situation (motives such as party, relaxation and social function) or of him-/herself as an individual (motives such as mindfulness, identity marker and somatic function). They often mentioned medical and recreational motives in the same account, and carefully presented themselves as rational individuals. The motives reflect that the drugs discourse is increasingly medicalized, that responsibility is highly esteemed in contemporary societies, and that cannabis use is still stigmatized in Sweden.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

We would like to thank the anonymous reviewers and the Editor of D:EPP for their insightful and valuable comments on previous versions of this article. Thanks also to the study participants for sharing their stories with us. This work was supported by Forte under grant number [2015-00283].