Abstract
Two South African professional women were early advocates of cannabis decriminalisation during the second half of the twentieth century. Frances Ames (1920-2002) was a neurologist and psychiatrist based at the Medical School of the University of Cape Town. Helen Suzman (1917-2009) represented the Progressive Party for 36 years as an opposition member of parliament. This article documents their individual - later allied - activities and arguments, initially in relation to National Party (apartheid) drug control measures and then into the democratic era of the African National Congress. A social history approach reveals continuities and changes in the cannabis policy rationales of successive governments and the challenges made to these policies.
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CITATION STYLE
Seganoe, L., & Waetjen, T. (2023). Advocates of “an unpopular cause”: Frances Ames, Helen Suzman and Cannabis Decriminalisation in South Africa. Historia, 68(1), 142–175. https://doi.org/10.17159/2309-8392/2023/v68n1a6
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