The research presentation from the SARN Members’ June 2021 Meeting is now available, which was presented on 14 June 2021 via Zoom.
Daniel Jones (University of Stirling) presented: “Alcohol packaging as a marketing and health communications tool: a focus group study with young adult drinkers in Scotland”.
Journal article in Addiction Research & Theory: Health information, messaging and warnings on alcohol packaging: a focus group study with young adult drinkers in Scotland, doi: 10.1080/16066359.2021.1884229
Meeting #5 (March 2021) – Brierley-Jones et al. (2014)
In our fifth meeting on Wednesday 24 March, we discussed Brierley-Jones et al. Habitus of home and traditional drinking: a qualitative analysis of reported middle-class alcohol use. Sociol Health Illn. 2014; 36(7): 1054-76. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.12145
This qualitative paper explores attitudes, meanings and behaviours in relation to alcohol consumption among professional, managerial and clerical employees. The title clearly conveys the topic, indicating the paper will focus on alcohol use among middle-class people. The authors suggest that members of higher socioeconomic groups may build resistance to harmful effects of alcohol through healthy behaviours (e.g. diet, physical activity) and may not access relevant services until irreversible health damage has occurred. The study draws on Bourdieu’s (1984) conceptual framework, which suggests that choices of food and drink are aligned with one’s position in the class hierarchy. It describes the idea of “habitus” – a set of socially ingrained dispositions and practices, that explain the way people understand and respond to the world around them….. [Read on]
SARN is supporting Professor Carol Emslie (SARN Co-Chair) and colleagues at the Glasgow Caledonian University (GCU) Substance Use Research Group to host a series of the Society for the Study of Addiction (SSA) funded Qualitative Methods Journal Club (QMJC) from November 2020 – April 2021.
In our sixth and final meeting on Tuesday 20 April, from 2pm-3:15pm BST on Zoom, we will be discussing:
Salerno Valdez E, et al. How the U.S.-Mexico border influences adolescent substance use: Youth participatory action research using photovoice. Int J Drug Policy. 2019; 73: 146-155. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2019.07.011 [PMC Full Text]
When reading, please consider / reflect on:
How might you apply these methods to your own area of research?
What are the strengths and weaknesses of the approaches?
Where do we draw the line between research and advocacy/engagement?
In our fourth meeting on Tuesday 23 February, we discussed Thurnell-Read, T. 2011. ‘Common-sense’ research: Senses, emotions and embodiment in researching stag tourism in Eastern Europe. Methodological Innovations Online, 6(3), pp.39-49. doi: 10.4256/mio.2011.005
This fascinating study uses the stag weekend as a lens to explore men’s drinking, masculinities and the male body, adding to a relatively recent body of work which focuses on alcohol and men’s gendered identity […] Thurnell-Read (2011) draws on in-depth participant observation with eight groups of British men in Krakow old town centre who are ‘off the leash and out of control’ to question previous assumptions about men invariably being expected to demonstrate ‘manliness’ by ‘holding’ their drink and exerting control over their bodies…. [Read on]
The two research presentations from the SARN Members’ March 2021 Meeting are now available, which were presented on 9 March 2021 via Zoom.
Professor Niamh Fitzgerald and Dr Isabelle Uny (University of Stirling) presented: “Managing COVID-19 transmission risks in bars: can pubs and bars effectively and consistently prevent COVID-19 transmission risks?”
Research article: Fitzgerald N, Uny I, Brown A, Eadie D, Ford A, Lewsey J, and Stead M (2021) Managing COVID-19 transmission risks in bars: an interview and observation study, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 82, 42–54. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2021.82.42
Dr Andrea Mohan (University of Dundee) presented: “What can we learn from the perspectives of repeat drink-drivers? Findings from a qualitative study”.