Affiliation:
1. Centre for Alcohol Policy Research La Trobe University Melbourne Australia
2. National Drug Research Institute Curtin University Perth Australia
3. Centre for Clinical Neuroscience Karolinska Institute Stockholm Sweden
4. School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport La Trobe University Melbourne Australia
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionIn this article we seek to understand the changing social position of alcohol use for young people in Australia by identifying how alcohol has become framed as posing a significant risk to their bodies and futures.MethodsForty interviews were conducted with young people aged 18–21 years from Melbourne, Australia, who had previously identified as light drinkers or abstainers. Drawing on insights from contemporary sociologies of risk, we explored how risk was discussed as a governing concept that shaped young people's views of alcohol, and how it encouraged or necessitated risk‐avoidance in daily life.ResultsParticipants drew on a range of risk discourses in framing their abstention or moderate drinking along the lines of health, wellness, wisdom and productivity. They reiterated social constructions of heavy or regular alcohol use as irresponsible, threatening and potentially addictive. The focus on personal responsibility was striking in most accounts. Participants seemed to have routinised ways of practicing risk avoidance and coordinated drinking practices with other practices in their everyday life, with alcohol therefore ‘competing for time’.Discussion and ConclusionsOur findings endorse the idea that discourses of risk and individual responsibility shape the contemporary socio‐cultural value of alcohol for young people. Risk avoidance has become routine and is manifested through the practice of restraint and control. This appears particular to high‐income countries like Australia, where concerns about young people's futures and economic security are increasing, and where neoliberal politics are the foundations of governmental ideology.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Subject
Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
4 articles.
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