This study examines the experiences of women who work in legal cannabis to understand how what it means to use or distribute cannabis is changing in the transition from prohibition to legalization. Drawing on 17 in-depth interviews, I argue that women’s claims that they are engaged in professional, ethical, legitimate labor constitute a moral enterprise that contests definitions of their work as deviant and criminal. Although these claims are ostensibly color- and gender-blind, I suggest that they actually confer racialized and gendered meanings on cannabis that shore up the hegemony of white patriarchy in the industry. First, I show that my participants talk about customers and products in ways that redefine cannabis as socially acceptable...
The cannabis industry in the United States is a competitive 16.9-billion-dollar industry built on pr...
Modern media patterns show feminist narratives being used to market different consumer products in t...
The marijuana worker is absent from public discourse. The following thesis will illustrate this fact...
This study examines the experiences of women who work in legal cannabis to understand how what it me...
This paper explores the experiences of women involved with rural marijuana production in Northern Ca...
In this Independent Study I have used feminist theory and the standpoint theory to examine why many ...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Social Science: Environment and Community, 2013This thesis...
Cannabis in Washington has enjoyed significant social acceptance as indicated by high use rates and ...
Cannabis users have been historically stigmatized and criminalized for non-violent behaviors such as...
Sexual harassment continues to endure as a public health problem through its persistence in everyday...
I. Introduction In the last decade, the legal cannabis industry emerged as a fast-growing and comple...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2018Economic sociologists have shown that legitimacy is...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2023Moral legitimacy of market activities is important in ...
Studies of illicit drug markets have focused predominantly on male dealers. Women's experiences may ...
After decades of prohibition and advocacy for law reform, over 60 countries have legalized cannabis....
The cannabis industry in the United States is a competitive 16.9-billion-dollar industry built on pr...
Modern media patterns show feminist narratives being used to market different consumer products in t...
The marijuana worker is absent from public discourse. The following thesis will illustrate this fact...
This study examines the experiences of women who work in legal cannabis to understand how what it me...
This paper explores the experiences of women involved with rural marijuana production in Northern Ca...
In this Independent Study I have used feminist theory and the standpoint theory to examine why many ...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Social Science: Environment and Community, 2013This thesis...
Cannabis in Washington has enjoyed significant social acceptance as indicated by high use rates and ...
Cannabis users have been historically stigmatized and criminalized for non-violent behaviors such as...
Sexual harassment continues to endure as a public health problem through its persistence in everyday...
I. Introduction In the last decade, the legal cannabis industry emerged as a fast-growing and comple...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2018Economic sociologists have shown that legitimacy is...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2023Moral legitimacy of market activities is important in ...
Studies of illicit drug markets have focused predominantly on male dealers. Women's experiences may ...
After decades of prohibition and advocacy for law reform, over 60 countries have legalized cannabis....
The cannabis industry in the United States is a competitive 16.9-billion-dollar industry built on pr...
Modern media patterns show feminist narratives being used to market different consumer products in t...
The marijuana worker is absent from public discourse. The following thesis will illustrate this fact...