Hi again,
After a long time, the final article related to my interviews here on the Nexus has been published. The article is called How to Disappear Completely: Entheogen-induced Experiences of Self-dissolution and is available, unfortunately only for people with library access, at
https://journal.equinoxp...JSNR/article/view/25490
If you would like to read it, you will have to get in touch with me at ResearchGate (
https://www.researchgate...profile/Petter-Johnstad ), where I can share it with you on an individual basis. Sorry for the hassle, but that's how it works.
I wrote nine different manuscripts based on interview and survey studies here on the Nexus and elsewhere, and all are now published. So I guess this is the last update. Before leaving, some of you might be interested to know that I have moved on into more general work on drug policy, so far publishing the following articles:
Comparative harms assessments for cannabis, alcohol, and tobacco: Risk for psychosis, cognitive impairment, and traffic accident. Drug Science, Policy and Law, 8, 1–20.
https://doi.org/10.1177/20503245221095228 . This rather technical (but freely available) article compares the risk for psychosis from cannabis and tobacco use and finds that moderate use of the former is not more strongly associated with psychosis than moderate use of the latter.
The international regime of drug control may violate the human right to life and security. International Journal of Drug Policy, 113, 103960.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2023.103960 . A philosophical discussion (freely available) of how the large-scale violence entailed by the drug war especially in Latin America is a human rights violation.
Why are the police against drug policy liberalisation? Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs. Advance online publication.
https://doi.org/10.1177/14550725231185417 . Short debate article (freely available) that discusses four reasons why the police generally remain firmly opposed to drug liberalization.
And coming up this fall: Racial and religious motives for drug prohibition (accepted for publication in the journal Drug Science, Policy and Law). Discusses how racism and the Inquisition's ban on psychedelics use in Latin America have served as historical bases for our present drug criminalization regime.