Enacting alcohol realities: gendering practices in Australian studies on 'alcohol-related presentations' to emergency departments
Date
Authors
Moore, David
Keane, Helen
Duncan, Duane
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
t ‘Alcohol-fuelled violence’ and its prevention has been the subject of recent intense
policy debate in Australia, with the content of this debate informed by a surprisingly
narrow range of research resources. In particular, given the well-established
relationship between masculinities and violence, the meagre attention paid to the role
of gender in alcohol research and policy recommendations stands out as a critical
issue. In this article, which draws on recent work in feminist science studies and
science and technology studies, we focus on the treatment of gender, alcohol and
violence in Australian research on ‘alcohol-related presentations’ to emergency
departments (EDs), analysing this type of research because of its prominence in
policy debates. We focus on four types of ‘gendering practice’ through which
research genders ‘alcohol-related presentations’ to EDs: omitting gender from
consideration, overlooking clearly gendered data when making gender-neutral policy
recommendations, rendering gender invisible via methodological considerations, and
addressing gender in terms of risk and vulnerability. We argue that ED research
practices and their policy recommendations reproduce normative understandings of
alcohol’s effects and of the operations of gender in social arrangements, thereby
contributing to the ‘evidence base’ supporting unfair policy responses.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Sociology of Health and Illness
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-01-31
Downloads
File
Description