There is no research examining alcohol-related aggression and anti-social behaviour in UK or European sportspeople (athletes), and no research has examined relationships between masculinity, alcohol consumption, and alcohol-related aggression and antisocial behaviour in sportspeople (athletes). This study addresses this gap. Cross-sectional. A sample (N=2048; women=892, 44%) of in season sportspeople enrolled at UK universities (response 83%), completed measures of masculinity, alcohol consumption, within-sport (on-field) violence, and having been the perpetrator and/or victim of alcohol-related violent/aggressive and antisocial behaviour (e.g., hit/assaulted, vandalism, sexual assault). Logistic regressions examined predictors of alcohol-r...
Recent evidence has highlighted intrasexual competition as a potential influence on anabolic−androge...
Background: Elevated levels of risky alcohol consumption and alcohol-related harm have been reported...
Aim: To examine whether receipt of alcohol industry sponsorship is associated with problematic drink...
Objectives: There is no research examining alcohol-related aggression and anti-social behaviour in U...
Objectives: There is no empirical research on alcohol-related aggression and antisocial behaviour in...
Background: The consumption of alcohol has increased by 0.6 litres per-capital between 1990 and 201...
University student-athletes have a high propensity to engage in risky behaviours, which result in ne...
Aims The primary aim is to report on whether or not students who are members of UK university sport...
As students enter university, many of them are introduced to a new social environment where they exp...
There is a growing body of evidence suggesting a link between sport participation and violent behavi...
This exploratory study examines aggressive behavior and alcohol use among college athletes. Scholar...
Aims: The primary aim is to compare members of UK university sport groups with students not engaged ...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Background: Players and spectators of sport report co...
Introduction and Aims: In large population-based alcohol studies males are shown consistently to dri...
Research indicates that university student sportspeople are a high-risk subgroup for hazardous alcoh...
Recent evidence has highlighted intrasexual competition as a potential influence on anabolic−androge...
Background: Elevated levels of risky alcohol consumption and alcohol-related harm have been reported...
Aim: To examine whether receipt of alcohol industry sponsorship is associated with problematic drink...
Objectives: There is no research examining alcohol-related aggression and anti-social behaviour in U...
Objectives: There is no empirical research on alcohol-related aggression and antisocial behaviour in...
Background: The consumption of alcohol has increased by 0.6 litres per-capital between 1990 and 201...
University student-athletes have a high propensity to engage in risky behaviours, which result in ne...
Aims The primary aim is to report on whether or not students who are members of UK university sport...
As students enter university, many of them are introduced to a new social environment where they exp...
There is a growing body of evidence suggesting a link between sport participation and violent behavi...
This exploratory study examines aggressive behavior and alcohol use among college athletes. Scholar...
Aims: The primary aim is to compare members of UK university sport groups with students not engaged ...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Background: Players and spectators of sport report co...
Introduction and Aims: In large population-based alcohol studies males are shown consistently to dri...
Research indicates that university student sportspeople are a high-risk subgroup for hazardous alcoh...
Recent evidence has highlighted intrasexual competition as a potential influence on anabolic−androge...
Background: Elevated levels of risky alcohol consumption and alcohol-related harm have been reported...
Aim: To examine whether receipt of alcohol industry sponsorship is associated with problematic drink...