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The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report, completed in 1894, was an Indo-British study of cannabis usage in India. By the 2 March 1893, the House of Commons of the United Kingdom was concerned with the effects of hemp drugs in the province of Bengal, India. The Government of India convened a seven-member commission to look into these questions, commencing their study on 3 July 1893. Lord Kimberley suggested modifying the scope of the investigation to be expanded to include all of India. The report the Commission produced was at least 3,281 pages long, with testimony from almost 1,200 "doctors, coolies, yogis, fakirs, heads of lunatic asylums, bhang peasants, tax gatherers, smugglers, army officers, hemp dealers, ganja palace operators and the clergy."〔Psychedelics encyclopedia By Peter G. Stafford, Jeremy Bigwood, Ronin Publishing, 1992 ISBN 978-0-914171-51-5〕 The President of the commission was Mr. W. Mackworth Young, and other members include H.T. Ommanney, A. H. L. Fraser, Surgeon-Major C.J.H. Warden, Raja Soshi Sikhareshwar Roy, Kanwar Harnam Singh, and Lala Nihal Chand. Serving as secretary was Mr. H.J. McIntosh.〔Volume 2 of Committees and Commissions in Pre-independence India, 1836-1947, M. Anees Chishti, pp. 192-196, Mittal Publications, 2001 ISBN 978-81-7099-800-6〕 This extensively well-prepared and thorough report summarized the effects (potentially negative) of cannabis in a chapter dedicated to that. Here is the end of that chapter: ==Conclusions== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Indian Hemp Drugs Commission」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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