2014
DOI: 10.1080/19407963.2014.900989
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The ‘civilising’ effect of a ‘balanced’ night-time economy for ‘better people’: class and the cosmopolitan limit in the consumption and regulation of alcohol in Bournemouth

Abstract: The British night-time economy today has been characterised by academics across various disciplines as the result of neoliberal attempts to regenerate the evening economy 'on the cheap', leading to the dominance of 'mainstream nightlife' at the expense of subcultural traditional workingclass alternatives. One preferable alternative offered is the ideal of a 'diverse' and 'inclusive' 'creative city', with a greater focus on 'culture'. This article shows how such ideas have been taken up in the planning and regu… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Paralleling Monaghan’s (2014: 698) use of Elias to analyse anti-obesity health intervention policy, the drunken or obese body is posited as ‘the antithesis of the self-restrained, tightly regulated and disciplined body’ of the self-regulating civilized subject. Such discourses are evidently informed in numerous ways by ideas of gender, age and maturity, and social class (Haydock, 2014a, 2014b) and, as such, mean that much alcohol and public order related policy might be understood as a ‘civilizing offensive’ which targets particular drinkers who are constructed as problematic while neglecting others (Mitzman, 1987; Rohloff, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Paralleling Monaghan’s (2014: 698) use of Elias to analyse anti-obesity health intervention policy, the drunken or obese body is posited as ‘the antithesis of the self-restrained, tightly regulated and disciplined body’ of the self-regulating civilized subject. Such discourses are evidently informed in numerous ways by ideas of gender, age and maturity, and social class (Haydock, 2014a, 2014b) and, as such, mean that much alcohol and public order related policy might be understood as a ‘civilizing offensive’ which targets particular drinkers who are constructed as problematic while neglecting others (Mitzman, 1987; Rohloff, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the violent and unruly urban working-class male and the 'vulgar' and 'promiscuous' working-class female (Brown and Gregg, 2012) have long been stock figures in debates about problematic drinking. More recently, Haydock (2014b) has drawn on Bourdieu (1984) to explain how recent policy discourses have relied heavily on class-based notions of taste and respectability in in locating some drinkers as irresponsible and therefore appropriate target for moral censure and regulatory intervention.…”
Section: Civilized Drinkers and Their 'Others'mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Observation of previous research on tourism policy leads to the conclusion that economic aspect of the sector has attracted the most research attention. Some researchers who have conducted studies on the economic development of tourism include (Brida & Risso, 2010;Hall, 2009;Haydock, 2014;Yang & Chen, 2009), while other researchers carried out studies on the relationship between tourism economic development and tourism products and services, in this case tourist attractions (Getz & Page, 2005;O'Sullivana, Pickernella, & Senyardb, 2009;Preuss, 2009;Robertson, Rogers, & Leask, 2009). Nonetheless, not all previous research on tourism policy focused on tourism economic policy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%