The structural configurations of alcohol in Denmark: Policy, culture, and industry

Jakob Johan Demant, Troels Krarup

    Abstract

    This article analyzes recent developments in Danish alcohol
    policy, culture, and industry. It reveals cross-sector dynamics and
    complexities that are often downplayed in existing literature. It
    traces how a stable “structural configuration” emerged in the
    1960s-1980s between the three domains, based on liberalization.
    A particular adolescent alcohol culture of intoxication, however,
    emerged in the 1990s, raising public awareness and calls for
    policy intervention. Contrary to what may have been expected,
    this did not represent a break with the liberal alcohol configuration
    in policy, culture, and industry, but an increased segregation of
    adolescent consumption from adult consumption, exposing the
    former to severe legal and moral regulation. This analysis of
    historic-structural dynamics helps explain why adolescent drinking
    is dependent on more than isolated causal links such as between
    policy events and consumption.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftContemporary Drug Problems
    Vol/bind40
    Udgave nummer2
    Sider (fra-til)259-289
    ISSN0091-4509
    StatusUdgivet - 2013

    Citationsformater