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Key Facts and Issues

There is a complex statistical relationship between alcohol and violence, mediated by personality, expectancy, situational and socio-cultural factors.

  •          Norms and patterns surrounding alcohol and violence play a role in the relationship between the two.
  •          Cultures in which alcohol is well integrated into society (e.g., Spain, Italy, France) have lower rates of violence associated with alcohol than do cultures in which alcohol is less integrated into everyday life (e.g., Finland, Norway, Sweden, United States).
  •          Violence is more likely to involve drinking patterns such as binge drinking and high quantity consumption.
  •          The relationship of alcohol to violence is strongest in societies that condone violent behavior.

 

Certain drinking patterns and violence may share common risk factors.

  •          Genetic and temperamental traits, antisocial personality disorder, parental modeling of heavy drinking and aggression and poor interpersonal relations have been identified as predictors of both violence and alcohol abuse.
  •          Young males are most likely to drink heavily and also most likely to engage in aggressive and violent behavior.
  •          Group violence is often associated with delinquency, such as in football hooliganism and gangs.
  •          Similar neuropharmacological mechanisms may underlie both the action of alcohol on the central nervous system and some correlates of violent behavior.

 

A high proportion of violent crimes and offenses involves alcohol, but the causal relationship remains unclear.

  •          Reports of alcohol use at the time of an offense may indicate simply that offenders and victims consume alcohol, not that alcohol caused them to commit these acts.
  •          Intimate partner violence, sexual assaults and suicide are more frequently reported to involve some use of alcohol at the time, especially heavy alcohol consumption.
  •          Assaults (particularly sexual assaults) in which people who do not know each other well are more likely to involve alcohol.

 

Successful prevention of violence must address a range of factors and contexts.

  •          Harm reduction approaches to drinking environments can reduce the incidence of violence involving alcohol.
  •          Strategies that target violent behavior can also be effective, including early identification of risk factors and tendencies among aggressive individuals.
  •          Health and other professionals such as counselors and social workers can be trained to recognize and address violent behavior and alcohol problems.
  •          Improved anger management and communication skills can be helpful in reducing the risk for violent behavior.
  •          Reducing abusive or binge levels of drinking can help minimize risk in this and many other areas of potential harm.
     
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Research

Drinking Patterns

 

Policy Issues

Drunkeness 

Harm Reduction

Binge Drinking 

 

Publications

ICAP Reports (Index)

2: Binge Drinking (.pdf)

12: Violence (.pdf)

15: Drinking Patterns (.pdf)

 

Books (Index)

Drinking Patterns (.pdf)

Drinking Occasions (.pdf)

Moonshine Markets (.pdf)

Reasonable Risk (.pdf)

 

Other (Index)

Alcohol and Violence in Perspective (.pdf)

 

External Links

Portman Group

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