The 2020 Cannabis Referendum: Māori Voter Support, Racialized Policing, and the Criminal Justice System

Craig Dempster, Adele N. Norris
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

In the New Zealand 2020 cannabis referendum, 50.7% of all voters rejected the creation of a legally-regulated cannabis market and instead supported retaining the current prohibitionist policy. Although the referendum failed to pass, a majority of Māori voted in favor of cannabis law reform. This paper suggests that within the Māori community there is a more nuanced appreciation of the impact of policing cannabis. Māori perceive that greater harm is caused by the racialized policing of cannabis than by the usage of it. Following McCreanor, et al. (2014), this paper employs a thematic, content analysis of the New Zealand Herald’s coverage of the 2020 cannabis referendum to investigate the presence of race-based targeting/policing in discussions of the legislation. The results reveal that racial disparities emerged as secondary to framing both the impact of cannabis and the referendum as race-neutral and affecting everyone in society equally. This paper argues that the impact of the policing of this particular drug impacts Māori differently, wherein they bear the brunt of racialized policing. Thus, Māori possess a more sophisticated understanding that warrants consideration because it is inextricably linked to lived experiences of policing that differ from wider social narratives of policing and drug policy in New Zealand.  
2020年大麻公投:Māori选民支持、种族化警务和刑事司法系统
在新西兰2020年的大麻公投中,50.7%的选民拒绝建立一个合法监管的大麻市场,而是支持保留目前的禁止政策。虽然公投未能通过,但Māori的大多数人投票赞成大麻法改革。这篇论文表明,在Māori社区内,对大麻监管的影响有更细微的认识。Māori认为种族化的大麻管制造成的危害比大麻的使用造成的危害更大。继McCreanor等人(2014)之后,本文对《新西兰先驱报》对2020年大麻公投的报道进行了专题内容分析,以调查立法讨论中存在的基于种族的目标/警务。研究结果显示,大麻和公投的影响都是种族中立的,对社会上每个人的影响都是平等的,而种族差异则是次要的。本文认为,这种特殊药物的警务影响Māori不同,其中他们承受种族化警务的冲击。因此,Māori拥有更复杂的理解,值得考虑,因为它与警务生活经验密不可分,不同于新西兰警务和毒品政策的更广泛的社会叙述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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