Abstract
Aims: To explore norms for alcohol consumption in different parts of Europe, by studying what people mean by “alcohol abuse.”
Method: The participants were presented 18 standardized descriptions of different drinking patterns, obtained by systematically varying three levels of frequency of drinking, three levels of intoxication and two levels of context. Random samples of about 1000 persons aged 15 years and over were drawn from each of seven countries: Finland, Germany, Italy (Tuscany), Norway, Poland, Slovenia, and Spain. The participants were asked if they would call each of the descriptions “abuse” or not. As a measure of the “normative climate” in each country, the mean number of descriptions labeled “abuse” was calculated. We also estimated the conditional probabilities for using the different levels of the dimensions (frequency, intoxication, and context), given that the description was labeled “abuse.” This gave a quite easy comparison of the relative importance people in each country gave the different dimensions when they evaluated a drinking pattern as “abuse.”
Results: Three distinct groups of countries appeared: The Nordic countries had the lowest number of descriptions labeled as “abuse,” and Tuscany and Slovenia the highest. The other countries came in the middle.
Conclusion: It seems that norms for alcohol consumption vary geographically over Europe in a way that justifies the often used, but seldom defined, concept of “alcohol culture.” Southern European cultural settings suggest a normative system allowing for higher per capita consumption levels but also offering more restrictive informal norms on intoxication. Nordic countries, on the other hand, with their more restrictive alcohol policies, show a pattern of lower per capita consumption levels and less restrictive informal laws governing intoxication during drinking occasions.
Notes
Notes
1. The interviewer presents the following introduction to the respondent: “We now want to know what people in general mean by use and abuse of alcohol. I will therefore present to you 18 different statements describing different ways of using alcohol. The statements are written on cards, and the cards will be given to you one at a time. I want you to read the cards carefully. Some people will say that a person that drinks as described on the card is abusing alcohol, while others think it is not indicating abuse. The views on this vary a lot, but we are now interested in your personal opinion: Do you think that the statement on the card indicate abuse of alcohol or not?”
2. Quoted from the methodological note from Sociolab, Florence.