818
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

YouTube, ‘drug videos’ and drugs education

Pages 120-130 | Received 27 Mar 2012, Accepted 14 Jun 2012, Published online: 20 Jul 2012

References

  • Aldridge J. A hard habit to break? A role for substance misuse education in the new millennium. Health Education 2008; 108: 185–188
  • Alexa (2012). http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/youtube.com
  • Backinger CL, Pilsner AM, Augustson EM, Frydl A, Phillips T, Rowden J. YouTube as a source of quitting smoking information. Tobacco Control 2011; 20: 119–122
  • Bakker P, Sadaba C. The impact of the internet on users. The internet and the mass media, L Kung, R Picard, R Towse. Sage, London 2008; 17–44
  • Berridge V. Opium and the people: Opium and drug control policy in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Englandrevised. Free Association Books, London 1999
  • Blackman S. Chilling out: The cultural politics of substance consumption, youth and drug policy. Open University Press, Maidenhead 2004
  • Burgess J, Green J. YouTube: Online video and participatory culture. Polity Press, Cambridge 2009
  • J. Burke, & Thompson, T. (2002). ‘Drug Videos Shock Tactics Won't Work’, The Observer, 3rd March 2002. Retrieved March 16, 2010, from http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2002/mar/03/drugsandalcohol.jasonburke.
  • Carroll MV, Shensa AS, Primack BA. A comparison of Youtube videos related to cigarette and hookah tobacco smoking. Journal of Adolescent Health 2012; 50: 39
  • Cohen J, (1996). Drug education: Politics, propaganda and censorship. The International Journal of Drug Policy, 7, 153–7
  • Coggans, N. (2006). Drugs education and prevention: Has progress been made? Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy, 13, 417–422.
  • Coggans N, Watson J. Drug education: Approaches, effectiveness and delivery. Drugs: Education, Prevention, and Policy 1995; 2: 211–224
  • Collinson M. In search of the high life: Drugs crime, masculinities and consumption. British Journal of Criminology 1996; 36: 428–444
  • Comscore (2010). comScore releases May 2010 U.S. Online video rankings. Retrieved from http://www.comscore.com/Press_Events/Press_Releases/2010/6/comScore_Releases_May_2010_U.S._Online_Video_Rankings
  • Davies JB. Drugspeak: The analysis of drug discourse. Harwood Academic, Amsterdam 1997
  • Fairclough N. Media discourse. Edward Arnold, London 1995
  • Foster J. Social exclusion, crime and drugs. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 2000; 7: 317–330
  • Frank (2003). Welcome to Frank. A campaign for young people and parents. Briefing pack for press and local drugs workers. London: Home Office
  • Giulianotti R. Drugs and the Media in the era of postmodernity: An archaeological analysis. Media Culture Society 1997; 19: 413–439
  • Griffin C, Bengry-Howell A. Every time I do it I absolutely annihilate myself: Loss of (self-) consciousness and loss of memory in young people's drinking narratives. Sociology 2009; 43: 457–476
  • Grusin R. YouTube at the end of new media. The YouTube reader, P Snickars, P Vonderau. The National Library of Sweden, Stockholm 2009; 60–67
  • Hargrave A, Livingstone S. Annex 6 literary review OFCOM submission to the Byron review. OFCOM, London 2007
  • Hess A. Resistance up in smoke: Analyzing the limitations of deliberation on YouTube. Critical Studies in Media Communication 2009; 26: 411–434
  • Hoggart, R. (1957). The uses of literacy. London: Penguin Books.
  • Humphries D. Crack mothers, pregnancy, drugs and the media. Ohio State University Press, Columbus 1999
  • Hussin M, Frazier S, Thompson JK. Fat stigmatization on YouTube: A content analysis. Body Image 2011; 8: 90–92
  • Jones RH. Mediated addiction: The drug discourse of Hong Kong youth. Health Risk and Society 2005; 7: 25–45
  • Keane H. Intoxication, harm and pleasure: An analysis of Australian national alcohol strategy. Critical Public Health 2009; 19: 135–142
  • Kim K, Paek HJ, Lynn J. A content analysis of smoking fetish videos on YouTube: Regulatory implications for tobacco control. Health Communication 2010; 25: 97–106
  • Koff RN, Pumper M, Moreno M. ‘You Drink!’ on YouTube: College students’ portrayals of alcohol. Journal of Adolescent Health 2012; 50: 41–42
  • Lange PG. Videos of affinity on YouTube. The YouTube reader, P Snickars, P Vonderau. The National Library of Sweden, Stockholm 2009; 70–88
  • Lange J. Salvia divinorum: Effects and use among You Tube users. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2010; 108: 138–140
  • Manning P. There's no glamour in glue: News and the symbolic framing of substance misuse. Crime Media Culture 2006; 2: 49–66
  • Manning P, (Ed.). (2007). Drugs and popular culture: Drugs, media and identity in contemporary society. Cullompton, Devon: Willan
  • Manning P. Being stoned on YouTube: Drugs education and popular culture in the age of new media. Paper presented to the British Sociological Association Annual Conference, Glasgow Caledonian University, 7th January, 2011
  • Mass Observation. The pub and the people. Victor Gollanz, London 1943
  • Measham F, Moore K. Repertoires of distinction: Exploring patterns of weekend polydrug use. Criminology and Criminal Justice 2009; 9: 415–434
  • Naughton J. They can be funny sweet and flippant. But can a viral video change the world?. The Observer 2012, 11th March, p. 33
  • Plant M. Drugs in perspective. Tavistock, London 1987
  • Power R. Drugs and the media: Prevention campaigns and television. Drugs and British society, S MacGregor. Routledge, London 1989; 129–142
  • Reeves JL, Campbell R. Cracked Coverage: Television news and the anti-cocaine crusade. Duke University, London 1994
  • Ritzer G, Jurgenson N. Production, consumption, prosumption: The nature of capitalism in the age of the digital prosumer. Journal of Consumer Culture 2010; 10: 13–36
  • Russell K. Lysergic suburbia. Rave off: The end of the century party: Politics and deviance in contemporary youth culture, S Redhead. Avebury, Aldershot 1993; 97–112
  • Skeggs B. The moral economy of person production: The class relations of self-performance on reality television. The Sociological Review 2009; 57: 626–644
  • Thelwall M. Introduction to webometrics: Quantitative web research for the social sciences. Morgan & Claypool, San Rafael, CA 2009
  • Thomas M, (Ed.). (2011). Deconstructing digital natives: Young people, technologies and the new literacies. London: Routledge
  • Turner G. Ordinary people and the media: The demotic turn. Sage, London 2010
  • van Hout M. Assimilation, habitus and drug use in among Irish travellers. Critical Public Health 2011; 21: 203–220
  • van Zoonen L, Vis F, Mihelj S. Performing citizenship on YouTube: Activism, satire and online debate around the anti-Islam video Fitna. Critical Discourse Studies 2010; 7: 249–262
  • Vis F, van Zoonen L, Mihelj S. Women responding to the anti-Islam film Fitna: Voices and acts of citizenship on YouTube. Feminist Review 2011; 97: 110–129
  • Ward J. Flashback: Drugs and dealing in the Golden Age of the London rave scene. Devon: Willan, Cullompton 2010
  • Warner J. Craze: Gin and debauchery in the age of reason. Random House, London 2002
  • Yoo J, Kim J. Obesity in the new media: A content analysis of obesity videos on YouTube. Health Communication 2012; 27: 86–97
  • YouTube (2012). Holy Nyans! 60 hours per minute and 4 billion views per day on YouTube. Retrieved from http://youtube-global.blogspot.com/2012/01/holy-nyans-60-hours-per-minute-and-4.html

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.