TY - JOUR
T1 - Plausibly deniable - Domestic cannabis cultivation and the private rented sector in the UK
AU - L’Hoiry, Xavier
AU - Rugg, Julie
AU - Parton, Loren
AU - Antonopoulos, Georgios A.
PY - 2025/7/17
Y1 - 2025/7/17
N2 - Domestic cannabis cultivation has grown exponentially for the past several decades and is said to outstrip importation from abroad in many jurisdictions, the UK included. While research has been attentive to this shift, scant attention has been paid to the space in which much domestic cannabis cultivation takes place: privately rented residential property. This article explores how and why the private rented sector in the UK facilitates and incubates cannabis cultivation and makes this an attractive space for criminal actors to partake in this illegal activity. Drawing on 43 qualitative interviews with police and local authority practitioners in the UK with experience of intervening in domestic cannabis cultivation, the article details the many affordances of the private rented sector for those involved in cannabis cultivation. Key among these affordances are the layers of plausible deniability available to several of the actors involved– landlords, letting agents, tenants/growers– which serve to frustrate and obfuscate police investigations. The article also examines the instrumental role of residential property itself as a critical but easily disposable commodity which facilitates cannabis cultivation.
AB - Domestic cannabis cultivation has grown exponentially for the past several decades and is said to outstrip importation from abroad in many jurisdictions, the UK included. While research has been attentive to this shift, scant attention has been paid to the space in which much domestic cannabis cultivation takes place: privately rented residential property. This article explores how and why the private rented sector in the UK facilitates and incubates cannabis cultivation and makes this an attractive space for criminal actors to partake in this illegal activity. Drawing on 43 qualitative interviews with police and local authority practitioners in the UK with experience of intervening in domestic cannabis cultivation, the article details the many affordances of the private rented sector for those involved in cannabis cultivation. Key among these affordances are the layers of plausible deniability available to several of the actors involved– landlords, letting agents, tenants/growers– which serve to frustrate and obfuscate police investigations. The article also examines the instrumental role of residential property itself as a critical but easily disposable commodity which facilitates cannabis cultivation.
KW - domestic cannabis cultivation
KW - private rented sector
KW - landlords
KW - organised crime
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010762082
U2 - 10.1007/s12117-025-09571-7
DO - 10.1007/s12117-025-09571-7
M3 - Article
SN - 1084-4791
JO - Trends in Organized Crime
JF - Trends in Organized Crime
ER -