Research Catalog

Reducing drug trafficking revenues and violence in Mexico : would legalizing marijuana in California help? / Beau Kilmer ... [et al.].

Title
Reducing drug trafficking revenues and violence in Mexico : would legalizing marijuana in California help? / Beau Kilmer ... [et al.].
Publication
Santa Monica, CA : RAND International Programs and Drug Policy Research Center, 2010.

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TextUse in library KFC632 .R438 2010Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Drug Policy Research Center (U.S.)
  • Kilmer, Beau.
  • Rand Corporation.
Description
xiv, 57 p. : ill.; 28 cm.
Summary
U.S. demand for illicit drugs creates markets for Mexican drug trafficking organizations (DTOs). This paper examines how marijuana legalization in California might influence DTO revenues and the violence in Mexico, focusing on gross revenues from export and distribution to wholesale markets near the southwestern U.S. border. The analysis described here is rooted in an earlier RAND Corporation study on marijuana legalization (Kilmer, Caulkins, Pacula, et al., 2010) and presents a method of estimating the revenues that international drug traffickers derive from U.S. sales that is transparent and, hence, auditable and replicable. We believe that this method can be iteratively improved by research over time, whereas existing methods that rely heavily on classified information have not been subject to review and have not shown much ongoing improvement. Five technical appendixes include additional information about the weight of a marijuana joint, THC content of sinsemilla and commercial-grade marijuana, marijuana prices, Mexican DTO revenues from drugs other than marijuana, and the availability of Mexican marijuana in the U.S.
Series Statement
Occasional paper ; OP-325-RC
Uniform Title
Occasional paper (Rand Corporation) ; OP-325.
Subject
  • Drug legalization > California
  • Drug traffic > Mexico > Finance
  • Drug traffic > Mexico > Prevention
  • Marijuana > Law and legislation > California
  • Violent crimes > Mexico > Prevention
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references: p. 47-57.
Additional Formats (note)
  • Also available through the World Wide Web.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Introduction. -- Methods for estimating drug-trafficking organizations' drug revenues. -- U.S. marijuana consumption and Mexican drug-trafficking organizations' revenues from exporting Marijuana. -- How might legalization in California affect Mexican drug-trafficking organizations' marijuana export revenues? -- Beyond marijuana exports: insights about additional sources of Mexican drug- trafficking organizations' drug revenue. -- How could a reduction in marijuana revenues influence Mexican drug-trafficking organizations? -- Conclusion.
ISBN
  • 0833051075
  • 9780833051073
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library