Abstract Background In New Zealand, Pacific people continue to be more at risk of gambling harm than the general population, despite increasing public health efforts and treatment service provisions introduced to address this social and health issue. In looking at why this is so, our first concern was to ask why the delivery of the prevailing gambling-focussed programmes was not influencing Pacific gambling behaviours. In seeking to answer this question, it was important to explore ethnic-Pacific-specific factors of gambling harm prevention and reduction. Methods The research design was interpretivist/constructivist and phenomenological, applied through the lens of a Tongan worldview. Participants comprised Tongan male elders and youth. Rec...
Gambling affects communities in many ways, yet relatively little research has investigated community...
Hing, N ORCiD: 0000-0002-2150-9784This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated wi...
This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated with the consequences of card and co...
Pacific people in New Zealand are a minority ethnic population identified in national prevalence stu...
Pacific people in New Zealand are a minority ethnic population identified in national prevalence stu...
Pacific people have faced considerable difficulties in New Zealand economically and have been identi...
Abstract Objective: To describe survey findings which measure broader gambling harms and provide ben...
This study investigated the normalisation of gambling within the New Zealand context to explore whet...
A number of different countries and states have or are in the process of developing formal or inform...
In multicultural countries such as New Zealand, it is particularly important that gambling research ...
Background Emerging data suggest that problem/pathological gambling may be highly prevalent among As...
Background: In New Zealand, as elsewhere, only a small proportion of problem gamblers seek formal ...
This study examines the gambling behaviours, motivations for gambling and consequences of gambling f...
At the International Gambling Conference: Policy, Practice and Research in 2004 (Clarke, eCommunity-...
Gambling affects communities in many ways, yet relatively little research has investigated community...
Gambling affects communities in many ways, yet relatively little research has investigated community...
Hing, N ORCiD: 0000-0002-2150-9784This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated wi...
This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated with the consequences of card and co...
Pacific people in New Zealand are a minority ethnic population identified in national prevalence stu...
Pacific people in New Zealand are a minority ethnic population identified in national prevalence stu...
Pacific people have faced considerable difficulties in New Zealand economically and have been identi...
Abstract Objective: To describe survey findings which measure broader gambling harms and provide ben...
This study investigated the normalisation of gambling within the New Zealand context to explore whet...
A number of different countries and states have or are in the process of developing formal or inform...
In multicultural countries such as New Zealand, it is particularly important that gambling research ...
Background Emerging data suggest that problem/pathological gambling may be highly prevalent among As...
Background: In New Zealand, as elsewhere, only a small proportion of problem gamblers seek formal ...
This study examines the gambling behaviours, motivations for gambling and consequences of gambling f...
At the International Gambling Conference: Policy, Practice and Research in 2004 (Clarke, eCommunity-...
Gambling affects communities in many ways, yet relatively little research has investigated community...
Gambling affects communities in many ways, yet relatively little research has investigated community...
Hing, N ORCiD: 0000-0002-2150-9784This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated wi...
This paper has two purposes. First, we examine crime associated with the consequences of card and co...