PDF Measham, F: Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene
Beschreibung Measham, F: Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene
/1853435120
A comprehensive interdisciplinary exploration of dance drug use in Britain. The authors look at all aspects of drug use, including the contexts in which they are used, effects on health and attitudes to drug use. They also present important policy recommendations.
Lesen Sie das Buch Measham, F: Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene
Dancing on drugs: risk, health, and hedonism in the ~ Dancing on drugs: risk, health, and hedonism in the British club scene. Fiona Measham, Judith Aldridge, Howard Parker. (224 pages, ÂŁ16.95.) Free Association Books .
Measham, F: Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in ~ Measham, F: Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene / Measham, Fiona, Aldridge, Judith, Parker, Howard / ISBN: 9781853435126 .
Dancing on drugs : risk, health and hedonism in the ~ Dancing on drugs : risk, health and hedonism in the British club scene / Fiona Measham, Judith Aldridge and Howard Parker. ISBN: 1853435120 Author: Measham, Fiona Aldridge, Judith Parker, Howard Publisher: London : Free Association Books, 2001. Description: VIII, 216 p. Subject: Drugs and popular music Great Britain. (source)lcsh Youth Drug use .
Dancing on Drugs / Research Explorer / The University of ~ The first ever academic research on drug use 'in situ', creating the research design now used by hundreds of studies across the globe in indoor venues and outdoor music festivals. Cited 238 times. Cited 238 times.
Dancing on Drugs - Citation formats / Research Explorer ~ T1 - Dancing on Drugs. T2 - Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene. AU - Measham, Fiona. AU - Aldridge, Judith. AU - Parker, Howard. PY - 2001. Y1 - 2001. N2 - The first ever academic research on drug use 'in situ', creating the research design now used by hundreds of studies across the globe in indoor venues and outdoor music .
Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British ~ Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club scene by Fiona Measham (2000-09-01) on . *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Will be shipped from US. Used books may not include companion materials, may have some shelf wear, may contain highlighting/notes
âFor us it is normalâ: Exploring the âRecreationalâ Use of ~ 5. Fiona Measham, Judith Aldridge and Howard Parker, Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene (London: Free Association Books, 2001). 6. Tracy Shildrick âYoung People, Illicit Drug Use and the Question of Normalizationâ, Journal of Youth Studies, Vol.5, No.1 (2002), pp.35â48. 7.
Repertoires of distinction: Exploring patterns of weekend ~ Measham, F. , J. Aldridge and H. Parker ( 2001) Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene. London : Free Association Books . Google Scholar
Rave Parties - ResearchGate ~ Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene . Jan 2001; F Measham; J Aldridge; H Parker; Measham, F., J. Aldridge and H. Parker (2001). Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and .
âBingeâ drinking, British alcohol policy and the new ~ Measham, F. (2005) âThe New Policy Mix: Alcohol, Harm Minimisation and Determined Drunkenness in Contemporary Societyâ, International Journal of Drug Policy 16, forthcoming. Google Scholar / ISI Measham, F. , J. Aldridge and H. Parker ( 2001 ) Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene.
2. A Brief History of Reducing Club Drug-Related Harm in ~ The first research on UK raves, dance clubs and club drug use was conducted by the Rave Research Bureau, led by Russell Newcombe and staffed by Fiona Measham and others. The research, consisting predominantly of covert observation at early 1990s raves, assisted some of the earliest dance clubs within licensed premises to keep their licences when threatened with closure due to illegal drug use .
(PDF) Researching the intoxicated: Informed consent ~ research on dance drug use by Measham and colleagues, ďŹeld- work staff regularly reported their perceptions that intoxication. affected willingness to consent to interview. Indeed, respondents .
Party drugs and party people: examining the ânormalization ~ More specifically, the present study draws upon the methods and approach set out in the study Dancing on Drugs; a research project conducted by Measham, Aldridge and Parker in a small number of nightclubs in the North of England in 1999 (see Measham, Aldridge, & Parker, 2001). That study collected further evidence in support of an emerging normalization thesis and was notable for the approach .
Digital Affect, Clubbing and Club Drug Cultures ~ Measham, F. and Moore, K. (2006) âReluctant Reflexivity, Implicit Insider Knowledge and the Development of Club Studiesâ in B. Sanders (ed.) Drugs, Clubs and Young People: Sociological and Public Health Perspectives, Aldershot: Ashgate. Google Scholar
Shaping the night: How licensing, social divisions and ~ This paper considers licensing as a governmental tool for controlling crime and disorder in the night-time economy while simultaneously shaping that economy's social mores. Using recent contrasting examples from the English and Welsh experience â the regulation of live music events and lap dancing â the paper shows how licensing frameworks endorse particular social, cultural and economic .
Appendix and Acknowledgements - Volteface ~ Appendix 2: Methodology. A number of innovative initiatives to reduce drug-related harm in the NTE were identified from the literature and emerging practice, primarily taking examples from either music festivals or European countries. 36 unstructured, anonymous interviews were conducted with a snowball sample of UK stakeholders from the police, public health, licensing, local policymaking and .
Page:Drug Use and Nightlifeďź More than Just Dance Music ~ â Measham F, Aldridge J, Parker H: Dancing on drugs: risk, health and hedonism in the British club scene London: Free Association Books; 2001. â Yacoubian GS, Boyle C, Harding CA, Loftus EA: Itâs a rave new world: estimating the prevalence and perceived harm of MDMA and other drug use among club rave attendees. J Drug Educ 2003, 33(2):187-196. â McCaughan JA, Carlson RG, Falck RS .
âIt's the most fun you can have for twenty quid ~ 6. After-hours clubs or breakfast clubs typically open at 3â4 am and continue until about 10 am. Ketamine use was far more visible and open at such after-hours clubs visited by the authors compared with dance clubs. 7. The term âsemi-socialâ was used by Sam, one of our ketamine interviewees. 8. See also Measham (2002 Measham F.
Kaplan HB Martin SS Johnson RJ et al 1986 Escalation of ~ Measham F (2002) Doing gender - doing drugs: Conceptualizing the gendering of drugs cultures. Contemporary Drug Problems 29(2): 335-73. Measham F, Aldridge J and Parker H (2001) Dancing on Drugs. Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene. London: Free Association Books. O'Malley PM and Valverde M (2004) Pleasure, freedom and drugs: The uses of 'pleasure' in liberal governance of drug .
Key Concepts in Drugs and Society (Sage Key Concepts ~ Key Concepts in Drugs and Society (Sage Key Concepts): : Coomber, Ross, McElrath, Karen, Measham, Fiona: Fremdsprachige BĂźcher
Cannabis Indica as a Motivation for Foreign Travel by ~ VAN HAVERE T., VANDERPLASSCHEN W., BROEKAERT E., DE BOURDEAUDHUI I., 2009, The influence of age and gender on party drug use among young adults attending dance events, clubs, and rock festivals in Belgium, Substance Use and Misuse, 44, pp. 1899-1915.
Play space: historical and socio-cultural reflections on ~ Secondly, the 1990s dance drug and dance club scene opened up alternative leisure possibilities to traditional pubs and night clubs for young adults. Therefore, faced with the possibility of both losing the traditional market to home-based entertainments and also losing a ânewâ psychoactive consumer market to the emergent dance club scene.
Tuckers firm: a case study of British organised crime ~ Dancing on drugs: risk, health and hedonism in the British club scene. Measham, F; Aldridge, J; Parker, H. The role of solicitors in facilitating âorganized Crimeâ: situational crime opportunities and their regulation . Middleton, DJ; Levi, M. Door work and legal risk: observations from an embodied ethnographer. Monaghan, LF. Structuring Mr. Nice: entrepreneurial opportunities and .
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Cannabis indica as a motivation for foreign travel by ~ Based on an anonymous on-line questionnaire survey, conducted among 1000 respondents, the authors present their demographic, socio-economic and spatial profile, their attitude to cannabis and the tourist trips they went on (scale, directions, destinations), involving cannabis consumption. Tourist trips of this kind were attractive to quite a large number of young people, mostly inhabiting .