合作还是共存?科罗拉多州和华盛顿州医用大麻药房对娱乐用大麻合法化的身份回应研究

Co-Opt or Coexist? A Study of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries’ Identity-Based Responses to Recreational-Use Legalization in Colorado and Washington

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 2018
被引 3
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了2014年娱乐用大麻合法化后,科罗拉多和华盛顿州的医用大麻药房如何根据社区对合法化的支持程度,选择强化或模糊其医疗身份来应对竞争。

Abstract

When recreational cannabis dispensaries first entered the U.S. market in 2014, how did incumbent medical cannabis dispensaries react? Did they emphasize their distinct identity as medical providers, distancing themselves from recreational dispensaries and those consumers who consume cannabis recreationally? Or did they downplay their medical orientation to compete directly for potential resources? In this study, we propose that how incumbent organizations position their identities in response to increasing competition from an emerging rival form depends on key audiences’ acceptance of the new form. Using data on the evolving cannabis markets in the states of Colorado and Washington during the year following the initial emergence of the recreational category, we find a sharpening of identity among medical dispensaries in communities with low voter support for recreational-use legalization. Medical dispensaries accentuated the medical orientation of their identities as recreational dispensaries increasingly set up operations and as buyers inclined more toward recreational use. In contrast, we find a blurring of medical/recreational identity in communities where voters demonstrated support for recreational-use legalization in the state-level ballot. Overall, the theoretical framework we advance integrates cultural and strategic approaches by explicitly considering conflict in different audiences’ beliefs about the legitimacy of products and its implications for market producers seeking to connect with and appeal to current/potential consumers. The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2017.1167

组织身份制度理论大麻产业合法性