This PhD thesis is an ethnographic investigation into the drinking practices of young people undertaken in the Canterbury (Kent, United Kingdom) night-time economy. This research took place across a series of fieldwork sites, including: pubs, night-clubs, the street, and young people’s houses across the city. The research included an in-depth ethnography which took place in a city-centre pub where I was working as a bartender, which adapted the methodological approach of the Chicago School of Sociology to urban studies in a contemporary context. Specific examples from the research included a case study with two young men in the pub who were drinking after work, and a wide-range of other ethnographic examples taken from scenarios arising t...
This study (i) makes an historical analysis of the current mapping together of moral panics about yo...
The ethnography explores the types of cultures that emerge in institutional settings, in particular ...
Background: Binge drinking is generally considered socially acceptable for students across Western c...
Heavy drinking occurs in complex, contradictory and heavily moralised contexts. The moral dimensions...
Taking cues from science and technology studies, this thesis explores how problems associated with t...
Consumption and consumerism are now accepted as being fundamental contexts for the construction of y...
In this chapter, I draw on an ethnographic study exploring the alcohol consumption practices and exp...
Young people’s very visible and public performances of drunkenness have become a matter of popular a...
Alcohol consumption, and particularly young people and drinking, have, for a long time, been the foc...
This paper draws on 12 months of ethnographic research to explore the drinking experiences of young ...
This paper draws on 12 months of ethnographic research to explore the drinking experiences of young ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Purpose: This paper outlines a study characterised by ‘pockets’ of co-production and argues for the ...
Prioritising a vision of long term cultural change toward the creation of a 'safer, healthier drinki...
Binge drinking is generally considered socially acceptable for students across Western culture. Soci...
This study (i) makes an historical analysis of the current mapping together of moral panics about yo...
The ethnography explores the types of cultures that emerge in institutional settings, in particular ...
Background: Binge drinking is generally considered socially acceptable for students across Western c...
Heavy drinking occurs in complex, contradictory and heavily moralised contexts. The moral dimensions...
Taking cues from science and technology studies, this thesis explores how problems associated with t...
Consumption and consumerism are now accepted as being fundamental contexts for the construction of y...
In this chapter, I draw on an ethnographic study exploring the alcohol consumption practices and exp...
Young people’s very visible and public performances of drunkenness have become a matter of popular a...
Alcohol consumption, and particularly young people and drinking, have, for a long time, been the foc...
This paper draws on 12 months of ethnographic research to explore the drinking experiences of young ...
This paper draws on 12 months of ethnographic research to explore the drinking experiences of young ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Purpose: This paper outlines a study characterised by ‘pockets’ of co-production and argues for the ...
Prioritising a vision of long term cultural change toward the creation of a 'safer, healthier drinki...
Binge drinking is generally considered socially acceptable for students across Western culture. Soci...
This study (i) makes an historical analysis of the current mapping together of moral panics about yo...
The ethnography explores the types of cultures that emerge in institutional settings, in particular ...
Background: Binge drinking is generally considered socially acceptable for students across Western c...