Toggle menu
648
116
70
6.9K
Landrace.Wiki - The Landrace Cannabis Wiki
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.
Revision as of 11:24, 28 March 2026 by Eloise Zomia (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Information page}} '''This page explains what country pages are on Landrace.Wiki, what they should contain, and how to create one.''' For an overview of the full geographic hierarchy, see Help:Geographic pages. == What is a country page? == A country page is the top-level geographic entry point for a nation's cannabis history, culture, legal framework, cultivation practices, and conservation status. It provides context that individual accession and region pages...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
ℹ️
This is a project information page for Landrace.Wiki. It describes the project's standards, processes, or structure. It is not an encyclopaedic article.

This page explains what country pages are on Landrace.Wiki, what they should contain, and how to create one.

For an overview of the full geographic hierarchy, see Help:Geographic pages.

What is a country page?

A country page is the top-level geographic entry point for a nation's cannabis history, culture, legal framework, cultivation practices, and conservation status. It provides context that individual accession and region pages cannot: the legal environment that shapes what farmers can grow, the cultural traditions that explain why they grow it, and the historical forces that brought specific varieties to specific places.

Country pages are not simple summaries. They are reference articles built from primary sources, field observations, and published research. The Cambodia page, for example, draws on ethnobotanical fieldwork, colonial archives, US diplomatic cables, news reporting, and direct field observations spanning five decades.

The infobox

Every country page uses {{Infobox Country}} at the top. The infobox displays:

  • Country name and local name (in native script)
  • A map showing all accessions documented in that country
  • Flag image
  • Capital, continent, and gene pool
  • Cannabis status section: legal status (with colour-coded styling), the year that status took effect, and the current enforcement level
  • Documentation counts: growing regions, growing areas, and accessions automatically tallied via semantic queries

Infobox parameters

Parameter Description Example
country_name Display name (defaults to page title) India
local_name Name in local script with romanisation भारत (Bhārat)
flag Flag image filename Flag of India.svg
image Optional hero image filename India_landscape.jpg
image_caption Caption for hero image Himalayan foothills
capital Capital city New Delhi
continent Continent Asia
gene_pool Primary gene pool (creates a wiki link) South Asia
legal_status Current cannabis legal status Illegal (exceptions for bhang)
legal_status_class CSS class for styling: illegal, decriminalized, medical, legal, unknown illegal
legal_status_year Year current status took effect 1985
enforcement Description of enforcement level Variable by state

Standard sections

Country pages follow a consistent section structure. Not every section will be relevant for every country, but the ordering should be maintained where sections are present:

Lead paragraph

A concise overview of the country's relationship with cannabis: how long cultivation has been documented, what role it plays culturally, the current legal situation, and what is known (or not known) about its landrace varieties. Keep it factual and sourced.

Culture

Traditional and contemporary cannabis use: culinary, medicinal, religious, social, textile. Subsections as needed (e.g. "Culinary Use," "Medicinal Use," "Smoking and Social Use"). Attribute information clearly: ethnobotanical fieldwork, oral history, published sources.

Chronological treatment of cannabis law in the country: pre-colonial status, colonial-era regulation, post-independence legislation, international treaty obligations, current legal framework. Cite primary legal sources (statutes, treaties, government reports) where possible.

Cultivation history

How cannabis has been grown over time: traditional practices, commercial expansion, shifts in cultivation geography, the impact of prohibition on growing practices. Include specific locations, dates, and scale where documented.

Growing practices

How cannabis is actually cultivated: traditional agronomy, modern prohibition-era adaptations, seasonal cycles, seed sourcing, processing methods. Distinguish between historical and current practices.

Varieties and genetics

What is known about the country's cannabis varieties: botanical classification, morphological observations, quality tiers, chemotype data if available. Be honest about gaps; most countries have no systematic genetic characterisation.

The market

Supply chain structure, pricing, domestic vs export trade, how the market has changed over time. Price tables with sources are valuable.

Enforcement

Eradication campaigns, arrest statistics, enforcement patterns and challenges, selective enforcement. Include the eradication map where data exists:

{{EradicationMap|country=CountryName|category=Enforcement|title=CountryName: Landrace cannabis eradication map|height=600px|limit=2000}}

Growing regions

A semantic query listing all growing regions documented for the country:

{{#ask:[[Category:Growing Region]][[Has country::{{PAGENAME}}]] |?Has conservation status |mainlabel=Region |format=table |class=wikitable sortable |default=No growing regions documented yet. }}

Follow with a similar query for growing areas.

Conservation status

Assessment of threats to the country's landrace varieties: eradication, genetic contamination, cultural disruption, habitat loss, knowledge destruction. State the overall conservation status (e.g. "Endangered") with justification.

See also, bibliography, references

Cross-links to related pages, a structured bibliography of key sources, and the references section using <references />.

Creating a country page

  1. Use the country's common English name as the page title (e.g. India, Cambodia, Thailand).
  2. Add {{Infobox Country}} at the top with as many parameters as you can fill.
  3. Write the lead paragraph.
  4. Add sections following the standard structure above. Leave out sections you cannot populate rather than including empty stubs.
  5. Add categories: [[Category:Country]], [[Category:Asia]] (or the relevant continent), and the relevant sub-region (e.g. [[Category:Southeast Asia]]).
  6. Use <references /> at the bottom, not {{Reflist}}.

Writing standards

Country pages are among the most visible pages on the wiki. They set the standard for the rest of the project.

  • Cite everything. Unsourced claims should carry {{Citation needed}} tags.
  • Distinguish between direct observation, oral history, and published sources. See Norms: Tone and evidence.
  • Use section stubs ({{Section stub}}) for sections that need expansion, with TODO comments explaining what content is needed.
  • Do not use em dashes. Use commas, colons, semicolons, or periods instead.
  • Keep language factual and documentary. No promotional language, no superlatives.
  • Protect farmer identities and sensitive locations. See Norms: Safety.