Public Health
Volume 126, Issue 1 , Pages 3-11, January 2012

Rethinking drinking cultures: A review of drinking cultures and a reconstructed dimensional approach

  • R. Gordon

      Affiliations

    • Centre for Health Initiatives, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.
    • Please note authors are listed alphabetically and made equal contributions to the research article.
  • ,
  • D. Heim

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychology, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
    • Please note authors are listed alphabetically and made equal contributions to the research article.
  • ,
  • S. MacAskill

      Affiliations

    • Institute for Social Marketing, University of Stirling and the Open University, Stirling, UK
    • Please note authors are listed alphabetically and made equal contributions to the research article.

Received 23 June 2010; received in revised form 11 April 2011; accepted 18 September 2011. published online 05 December 2011.

Summary 

Objectives

This paper presents the synthesis of findings from a literature review study of drinking cultures across five West European countries (France, Germany, Spain, Sweden and the UK), examining the nature and features of drinking typologies before proposing a new dimensional approach.

Study design

The study incorporated a systematic literature search covering the period 1980–2010 for literature from each of the five countries.

Methods

Researchers reviewed abstracts and selected relevant material, leading to the inclusion of 203 articles from database searches plus 26 records from other sources. A summary of key findings are presented here. Intercoder reliability checks were performed to ensure consistency in inclusion in the review according to pre-ordained selection criteria. The review was further supplemented by the inclusion of gray literature including policy documents obtained from a range of sources.

Results

It was found that sociocultural contexts have a major influence on drinking cultures, and this is an area in which there have been dramatic changes over the past 30 years. Differences were found between the countries in terms of drinking cultures, the way in which alcohol is viewed, and how alcohol-related policy and practice operates. However, there seems to be an increasing homogenization of drinking cultures across many countries, strongly influenced by Anglo-US cultural zeitgeist. Modern drinking patterns have emerged, offering a complex and often overlapping schema of drinking typologies.

Conclusions

The study suggests that the wet–dry dichotomy is no longer relevant and that a revised version of a more recent dimensional approach featuring three dimensions – hedonism, function and control – may be better placed to describe and measure contemporary drinking cultures.

Keywords: Alcohol, Drinking, Cultures, Literature review, Countries, Typology, Dimensions

 

PII: S0033-3506(11)00267-8

doi:10.1016/j.puhe.2011.09.014

Public Health
Volume 126, Issue 1 , Pages 3-11, January 2012