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Noticed and then Forgotten: Gender in Alcohol Policy Stakeholder Responses to Alcohol and Violence.

Adrian FarrugiaDavid MooreHelen KeaneMats EkendahlKathryn GrahamDuane Duncan
Published in: Qualitative health research (2022)
In this article, we analyse interview data on how alcohol policy stakeholders in Australia, Canada and Sweden understand the relationship between men, masculinities, alcohol and violence. Using influential feminist scholarship on public policy and liberal political theory to analyse interviews with 42 alcohol policy stakeholders, we argue that while these stakeholders view men's violence as a key issue for intervention, masculinities are backgrounded in proposed responses and men positioned as unamenable to intervention. Instead, policy stakeholders prioritise generic interventions understood to protect all from the harms of men's drinking and violence without marking men for special attention. Shared across the data is a prioritisation of interventions that focus on harms recognised as relating to men's drinking but apply equally to all people and, as such, avoid naming men and masculinities as central to alcohol-related violence. We argue that this process works to background the role of masculinities in violence, leaving men unmarked and many possible targeted responses unthinkable.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • middle aged
  • alcohol consumption
  • public health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • adverse drug