Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2014
Publication Title
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
Publication Title (Abbreviation)
Cornell J.L. & Pub. Pol'y
Volume
24
Issue
2
First Page
319
Last Page
351
Abstract
To the great relief of many, American criminal law, long known for its harshness and expansive prohibitory reach, is now showing signs of softening. A prime example of this shift is seen in the proliferation of laws decriminalizing the personal possession of small amounts of marijuana: today, almost twenty states and dozens of localities have embraced decriminalization in some shape or form, with more laws very likely coming to fruition soon. Despite enjoying broad political support, the decriminalization movement has, however, failed to curb a core feature of criminalization: police authority to arrest individuals suspected of possessing marijuana. Arrests for marijuana possession have skyrocketed in number in recent years, including within decriminalization jurisdictions. This Article examines the chief reasons behind this disconnect, centering on powerful institutional incentives among police to continue to make arrests, enabled by judicial doctrine that predates the recent shift toward decriminalization. The Article also identifies ways to help ensure that laws decriminalizing simple marijuana possession, as well as other low-level offenses, better achieve decriminalization’s goal of limiting police arrest authority and the many negative personal consequences flowing from arrests.
Rights
© 2014 Wayne A. Logan
Faculty Biography
http://www.law.fsu.edu/our-faculty/profiles/wlogan
Recommended Citation
Wayne A. Logan,
After the Cheering Stopped: Decriminalization and Legalism's Limits, 24
Cornell J.L. & Pub. Pol'y
319
(2014),
Available at: https://ir.law.fsu.edu/articles/340
Comments
First published in Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy.