Negotiating the divide: Science, politics, and institutional boundaries in Swiss cannabis regulation.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
June 5, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Sznitman Sharon R. | |
Havinga, Jonathan Christopher | |
Casalini, Alessandro | |
Broers, Barbara |
Series
International Journal of Drug Policy
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1873-4758
0955-3959
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40479915
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Aim
Cannabis policy developments worldwide typically follow separate tracks for medical and non-medical use, even in jurisdictions pursuing both forms of legalization. As these parallel regulatory frameworks evolve, understanding how stakeholders negotiate and maintain boundaries between these domains become crucial for effective policy development. Using Swiss cannabis policies as a case study, this study examines how stakeholders engage in boundary work related to medical and non-medical cannabis regulation.
Methods
Thematic content analysis was conducted on qualitative interview data from 18 stakeholders involved in Swiss cannabis policy.
Results
Two distinct forms of boundary work emerged. Conceptual boundary work involved using discursive methods to legitimize medical cannabis as scientific while positioning non-medical cannabis in the social/political domain. Structural boundary work manifested through institutional mechanisms, particularly health insurance reimbursement and pharmacy distribution. Insurance reimbursement served as a key structural element distinguishing medical from non-medical cannabis. However, using pharmacies as distribution points in non-medical cannabis regulatory pilot projects was identified as problematic, potentially undermining intended boundaries between domains.
Conclusions
The study reveals that stakeholders engage in boundary work as a strategic tool to navigate the complexity of maintaining boundaries between medical and non-medical cannabis systems. Relying on scientific discourse to legitimize medical cannabis while keeping non-medical cannabis in the social/political sphere may create artificial distinctions that do not reflect the complex reality of cannabis use. Policymakers aiming to reduce blurred boundaries should carefully consider how policy elements may undermine intended separations between domains.
Cannabis policy developments worldwide typically follow separate tracks for medical and non-medical use, even in jurisdictions pursuing both forms of legalization. As these parallel regulatory frameworks evolve, understanding how stakeholders negotiate and maintain boundaries between these domains become crucial for effective policy development. Using Swiss cannabis policies as a case study, this study examines how stakeholders engage in boundary work related to medical and non-medical cannabis regulation.
Methods
Thematic content analysis was conducted on qualitative interview data from 18 stakeholders involved in Swiss cannabis policy.
Results
Two distinct forms of boundary work emerged. Conceptual boundary work involved using discursive methods to legitimize medical cannabis as scientific while positioning non-medical cannabis in the social/political domain. Structural boundary work manifested through institutional mechanisms, particularly health insurance reimbursement and pharmacy distribution. Insurance reimbursement served as a key structural element distinguishing medical from non-medical cannabis. However, using pharmacies as distribution points in non-medical cannabis regulatory pilot projects was identified as problematic, potentially undermining intended boundaries between domains.
Conclusions
The study reveals that stakeholders engage in boundary work as a strategic tool to navigate the complexity of maintaining boundaries between medical and non-medical cannabis systems. Relying on scientific discourse to legitimize medical cannabis while keeping non-medical cannabis in the social/political sphere may create artificial distinctions that do not reflect the complex reality of cannabis use. Policymakers aiming to reduce blurred boundaries should carefully consider how policy elements may undermine intended separations between domains.
Funding(s)
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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1-s2.0-S0955395925001653-main.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 520.46 KB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |