Sociala representationer av alkohol och narkotika i fokusgruppintervjuer med 18-åringar och
tonåringars föräldrar
Engelsk titel: Social representations of alcohol and illegal drugs in focus group interviews with 18-year-olds and
parents of teenagers
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Författare:
Abrahamson M
Email: maria.abrahamson@sorad.su.se
Språk: Swe
Antal referenser: 46
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 07023799
Sammanfattning
Aims: To analyse two generations’ associations to
the words ‘alcohol’ and ‘illegal drugs’
Methods: Focus groups were conducted with seven
groups of 18-year-olds and four groups of
parents of teenagers. The groups of young
people and the groups of parents were in
several respects each other’s opposites.
The young people were selected for focus
group interviews because they drink and
like to party. The parents were selected
because they represent parents who
take an active interest and care in young
people’s alcohol and drug habits. The focus
group sessions started with the participants
writing down all their associations, first to
‘alcohol’ and then to ‘illegal drugs’, with
two minutes for each topic. The processing
was done by classifying all words under
separate headings depending on the theme
of the associations.
Results: The most striking similarities between the
young people of the study and the parents
are that the two generations have similar
notions of the benefits of alcohol. These
regard having fun together with other
people, creating a party atmosphere and
feelings of togetherness, and also that
alcohol offers relaxation. Notions about the
short-term negative effects of alcohol are
also similar. The most obvious difference
between the generations is that young
people lack any words connoting the longterm
negative consequences from alcohol
use.
When it comes to illegal drugs,
disassociation from illegal drugs is the
foremost similarity between the young
people and the parents. The differences in
the main are that the young people have
more concrete associations as well as value-free descriptions of the
effects of using drugs and
the times for using drugs.
The parents describe the
phenomenon more from a
distance. Their associative
paths extend to things that
probably do not exist within
their own sphere of reference.
Another difference is that the
young people sometimes have
positive associations to drugs,
which are missing among the
parents.
Conclusions: In several ways young people
and parents share the same
ideas about alcohol and
illegal drugs. In regard to
alcohol they share the idea
of the immediate beneficial
properties of alcohol as well
as its immediate negative
consequences, ideas that
seem culturally deep-rooted.
In regard to drugs the
associative picture given by
young people and parents
to a large extent also seems
mutual, with respect to the
predominantly negative
picture. To a certain extent,
however, the young people
show in their associations
that illegal drugs are a
normal phenomena, while
simultaneously showing that
drugs are abnormal, and
that most disassociate from
them. Even in young people
with positive connotations to
drugs there are expressions
of cautiousness and risk
consciousness.