Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/108431
Type: Journal article
Title: Young people's perceptions of the risks of methamphetamine use in Adelaide nightclubs: a quantitative study
Author: Groves, A.
Citation: Flinders Law Journal, 2015; 17(1):95-126
Publisher: Flinders University, School of Law
Issue Date: 2015
ISSN: 1838-2975
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Andrew Groves
Abstract: Understanding young people's perceptions of the risks associated with the use of methamphetamines is an important but underresearched area. Precisely how these young people use the space of Adelaide nightclubs, perceive such drug risks, employ risk management strategies and how these factors interact to influence their experience of methamphetamines in the nightclub is largely unknown. This article presents self-report data drawn from a sample of 457 young people who completed the Perception of Risk survey questionnaire while waiting to enter one of five key Adelaide nightclubs in 2010. Participants were examined in terms of gender, age, drug use history,' motivations for nightclub attendance and frequency of nightclub attendance. Approximately one-fifth of the sample reported using methamphetamines (21.0 percent). Participants demonstrated a pattern of attendance at Adelaide nightclubs that reflects a broader understanding of the important role of the nightclub in their social lives, which for some also involves the use of methamphetamines. Specifically, participants' motivations for 'nightclubbing' concern the consumption of leisure and are guided by social group membership, in which methamphetamine use is not prioritised, as evident in the development of knowledge and risk management strategies to ensure safe consumption in the club. Perceptions of risk reflect concern surrounding unregulated methamphetamine use, as well as gendered concerns linked to safety and the prevalence of alcohol misuse, violence, drink spiking, physical injury and sexual assault. These findings were consistent across the sample, suggesting a shift in youth nightclub culture that has numerous implications for understanding and reducing the use of methamphetamines and regulation of the night-time economy generally, which are discussed herein.
Rights: Copyright Status Unknown
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 3
Law publications

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