ABSTRACT

In the early 1980s, emphasis had shifted from the treatment of alcohol problems to their prevention. Yet no clear integrated policy yet existed about how alcohol problems could best be prevented. Many different strategies were put forward as solutions but some were in competition with each other, while some were actually incompatible.

Originally published in 1983, what this book does is to draw together a cross section of these different and competing voices so as to give a sense of the quality and direction of the great alcohol debate at the time. After setting into context some of the basic questions to do with the prevention of alcohol problems, the authors knit together and juxtapose short contributions from a very wide variety of experts from around the world. Clinicians, educators, sociologists, advertisers, marketing men, economists, philosophers, geneticists and international civil servants present different points of view on health education, the media, advertising, trade, the law, the environment and on the ethical basis of the debate itself. The authors bravely attempt to pull some general sense out of this profusion of what the way ahead is likely to be.

It should be noted that this reissue very much reflects the context of the times in which it was written and that the contributors were participating in a debate where differences of opinion were actively encouraged.

chapter 1|9 pages

Why is Alcohol a Problem?

chapter 2|7 pages

What Problems are Preventible?

chapter 3|8 pages

What Can be Achieved Through Prohibition?

chapter 4|8 pages

What Can be Achieved Through Treatment?

chapter 6|6 pages

What Can be Done to Influence Adults?

chapter 8|3 pages

What State of Which Art?

chapter 9|16 pages

The Schools Education Debate

chapter 10|20 pages

The Health Education Debate

chapter 11|12 pages

The Media Debate

chapter 12|14 pages

The Advertising Debate

chapter 13|15 pages

The Trade Debate

chapter 14|14 pages

The Environment Debate

chapter 15|18 pages

The Fiscal and Legislative Debate

chapter 16|14 pages

The Ethical Debate

chapter 17|16 pages

The Way Ahead