As
we saw in the 2018 midterms, U.S. states are continuing to legalize
marijuana. A ballot initiative legalizing marijuana for recreational
purposes passed decisively in Michigan, making it the 10th state to do so over the past six years. Meanwhile, in Missouri and Utah, citizens voted to legalize marijuana for medical purposes, which 23 states now allow.
While Americans overall are becoming more supportive of marijuana legalization, public opinion has an unusual “reverse gender gap.” On many issues, women are more liberal than men. But men are actually more likely than women to support legalizing marijuana. Our new research helps explain why.
Here’s how we did our research
We analyzed a March 2013 Pew Research Center survey
that included questions about attitudes toward marijuana and
self-reported marijuana use. These data help identify factors that do
and do not explain this reverse gender gap.
One
factor that didn’t matter was parenthood. We expected mothers to be
less likely to support legalizing marijuana, out of a desire to protect
their children. Indeed, earlier studies
showed that parents were less likely to support legalizing marijuana
than others. But neither mothers nor fathers were more likely to oppose
marijuana legalization than people without children.
One
factor that did matter was women’s greater religiosity. Even though
women are more liberal than men, women attend church more frequently and
are more likely to identify as “born again.”
Because religious people
are more opposed to marijuana legalization, factoring in religiosity
narrows but does not eliminate the reverse gender gap. (Women’s
religiosity also helps explain their greater opposition to extramarital
sex and pornography.)
A second factor is what’s known as the “risky white men hypothesis.”
Researchers have shown that men, and white men in particular, tend to
accept risk more than others. This helps explain the gender gap on a
number of environmental, health, science, and technology-related issues. For example, white women and men and women of color worry more about the consequences of global warming and nuclear power.
We found that white men are more likely to support legalizing marijuana
than either white women or men of color, with women of color offering
the least support for marijuana legalization. Still, taking account of
race and gender did not eliminate the reverse gender gap either.
Ultimately,
what best explains the gender gap in marijuana attitudes is the gender
gap in marijuana use. Men (all men, not just white men) report using
marijuana more often than women.
Once marijuana use is taken into
account, there is no gender gap in attitudes toward gender gap in
marijuana legalization.
Why do men use marijuana more than women?
Research in sociology and psychology has found that men are more likely to engage in deviant and risk-taking behavior, although scholars debate why this is — whether biology, peer influence, different conceptions of morality, or something else.
Given
these findings, we think the gender gap in support for marijuana
legalization will eventually start to close. Over the past several
decades both women and men have become more likely to support legalizing
marijuana at roughly the same pace, which has kept the size of the gender gap fairly constant.
But as marijuana becomes legal in more and more states, using it will
likely be considered less risky or deviant and also less immoral. And as
Democratic elites increasingly favor more liberal marijuana policies,
this will help push Democrats in the electorate, who are
disproportionately women, toward greater support as well.
The result will likely be a consensus on marijuana legalization that increasingly transcends both partisanship and gender.
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