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Alcohol and the Community: A Systems Approach to Prevention (International Research Monographs in the Addictions)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Revised ed., 8/21/2008
EAN 9780521035040, ISBN10: 052103504X
Paperback, 200 pages, 22.9 x 15 x 1 cm
Language: English
An individual's decision to use alcohol and the frequency, quantity and situation of such use are the result of a combination of biological and social factors. Drinking is not only a personal choice, but also a matter of custom and social behaviour, and is influenced by access and economic factors including levels of disposable income and cost of alcoholic beverages. Until prevention efforts cease to focus narrowly on the individual and begin to adopt broader community perspectives on alcohol problems and strategies to reduce them, these efforts will fail. This book, first published in 1998, challenges the current implicit models used in alcohol problem prevention and demonstrates an ecological perspective of the community as a complex adaptive system composed of interacting subsystems, an appreciation and understanding of which offers an alternative approach to the prevention of alcohol dependence and alcohol-related problems.
Series editor's preface
Acknowledgements
1. The community system of alcohol use and alcohol problems
2. Consumption system
3. Retail sales subsystem
alcohol availability and promotion
4. Formal regulation and control subsystem
rules, administration and enforcement
5. Social norms subsystem
community values and social influences that affect drinking
6. Legal sanctions subsystem
prohibited uses of alcohol
7. Social, economic and health consequences subsystem
community identification of and responses to alcohol problems
8. Community-level alcohol problem prevention
References
Index.