ABSTRACT

What factors influence adolescents to take up smoking? Why do more girls smoke than boys? In contrast to medical orthodoxy, Smoking in Adolescence looks at smoking from the adolescents' own points of view. What emerges is that regular smokers are seen as fun-loving and nonconformist; cigarettes are a passport to a fashionable, popular and 'hard' identity.
Young people create, and are influenced by, complex images of smokers and nonsmokers. Barbara Lloyd and Kevin Lucas explore the psychological dimensions such as social environment, family, peers, stress and coping, body image, mood and pleasure. They suggest how anti-smoking interventions should be re-evaluated to take account of this new evidence throughout the school curriculum.
Smoking in Adolescence will be of practical interest to teachers, youth workers, health professionals and parents as well as students of psychology.

chapter 2|16 pages

Studying adolescent smoking

chapter 4|18 pages

The social environment

Families, relationships and smoking

chapter 5|20 pages

Social environments

Parenting, peers and school culture

chapter 6|24 pages

Smoking and mood

The control of stress, the pursuit of pleasure and concerns about the body

chapter 7|12 pages

Smoking and image formation

chapter 8|34 pages

Social identities of adolescent smokers

chapter 9|22 pages

Interventions

chapter 10|7 pages

Breaking the mould