Why Social Responsibility Matters in Morocco’s Cannabis Industry

Legal, Fair, Inclusive

Cannabis reform is about more than business — it’s about justice, inclusion, and making sure no one is left behind. That’s why social responsibility is at the heart of everything we do.

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A Legacy That Must Be Respected

For decades, cannabis cultivation sustained families and entire regions — especially in the Rif Mountains — but it also came with legal risks, stigma, and economic marginalization.

Now, as Morocco legalizes cannabis under Law 13-21, there’s a rare opportunity to build an industry that doesn’t forget its roots.

Our law firm was created not just to interpret regulations, but to ensure the transition to legal cannabis is fair, inclusive, and accountable.

Cannabis justice means building a legal industry that remembers who carried it through the illegal years.

What Social Responsibility Means to Us

Social responsibility in the cannabis industry is more than charity. It means:

  • Protecting traditional farmers and helping them access legal markets
  • Supporting cooperatives in becoming legally structured and compliant
  • Promoting gender inclusion, training, and representation
  • Educating communities about their rights, risks, and opportunities
  • Advocating for policy reforms that serve the public interest
  • We work not only with clients, but also with civil society organizations, agricultural engineers, and institutions that share this vision of equitable cannabis reform.

Who We Support

  • GACP cooperatives navigating complex legal systems
  • Young entrepreneurs launching ethical cannabis businesses
  • Women’s groups entering the legal cannabis value chain
  • NGOs and local leaders advocating for education and social equity
  • Lawmakers and officials seeking grounded, legal insight into policy impact
  • We see law as a tool to empower, not just regulate.

From Policy to Practice

“You cannot legalize the plant without legalizing the people who cultivated it.”

We support:

  • Community education events
  • Pro bono legal workshops
  • Inclusive licensing strategies
  • Farmer training with a legal lens
  • Collaborations with social development partners

Our work doesn’t end in the courtroom. It continues in fields, town halls, classrooms, and communities — wherever the law must be understood, not just written.

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