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Visions and means to execute them: key actors' opinions on local alcohol policy
Engelsk titel: Visions and means to execute them: key actors' opinions on local alcohol policy Författare: Holmila M ; Warpenius K ; Tigerstedt C Språk: Eng Antal referenser: 27 Dokumenttyp: Kommentar UI-nummer: 09025550

Tidskrift

Nordisk Alkohol- & Narkotikatidskrift 2008;25(5)401-18 ISSN 1455-0725 E-ISSN 1458-6126 KIBs bestånd av denna tidskrift

Sammanfattning

This study is based on an analysis of discussions of local experts on the prevention of alcoholrelated harms. Dismantling of the centralized and hierarchical alcohol control system in Finland has shifted responsibilities from the state to the local level, and restructured the system of alcohol policy and prevention. At the state level greater emphasis is now placed on supporting and enabling local work, and the local level is expected to co-ordinate multiprofessional team work on a broad basis. In this process the roles and responsibilities of different actors are being reconfigured. The substudy is a part of the Local Alcohol Policy (PAKKA) demonstration and evaluation project. This particular sub-study focuses on the possibilities and factors influencing sustainability of local interventions. The data were gathered in four group discussions. The discussion groups consisted of various actors influential in the professional fields of alcohol retail and the restaurant business, liquor licensing and surveillance, the police, and municipal harm prevention. The thematic discussion was facilitated by a researcher. The discussions were videotaped and transcribed and analysed by using the group as the unit of analyses. The participants explored ways of resolving the pressures caused by the decentralizing of alcohol prevention to the local level, and conceptualized the role and position of preventive work amid the changes in the alcohol administration. The different groups had similar views on the difficulties and obstacles faced by local prevention of alcohol-related harms. All of them also discussed the balance between public and private responsibility. The groups differed from one another in terms of how they saw the relationship between alcohol markets, civil society and the public sector. They also differed in how optimistic they were about the future of local work in the prevention of alcohol-related harms. The analysis reveals a kind of an empowerment story about the future possibilities of local alcohol policy.