2013
DOI: 10.1080/09581596.2012.748883
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Youth drinking cultures, social networking and alcohol marketing: implications for public health

Abstract: Alcohol consumption and heavy drinking in young adults have been key concerns for public health. Alcohol marketing is an important factor in contributing to negative outcomes. The rapid growth in the use of new social networking technologies raises new issues regarding alcohol marketing, as well as potential impacts on alcohol cultures more generally. Young people, for example, routinely tell and re-tell drinking stories online, share images depicting drinking, and are exposed to often intensive and novel form… Show more

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Cited by 107 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(53 reference statements)
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“…With respect to these platforms, McCreanor et al (2013) argue that consumers who document their drinking practices on social media are labourers who produce both peer-to-peer promotional narratives and rich troves of data. However, these accounts of consumer participation in marketing need to be contextualised within a more precise specification of the advertising model that media platforms are engineering.…”
Section: A Media Platform Perspective On Alcohol Marketingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…With respect to these platforms, McCreanor et al (2013) argue that consumers who document their drinking practices on social media are labourers who produce both peer-to-peer promotional narratives and rich troves of data. However, these accounts of consumer participation in marketing need to be contextualised within a more precise specification of the advertising model that media platforms are engineering.…”
Section: A Media Platform Perspective On Alcohol Marketingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this model, alcohol brands benefit from the larger depiction of drinking culture by consumers (Atkinson et al 2013;Goodwin et al 2016;Griffiths and Casswell 2010;McCreanor et al 2013;Moreno et al 2010;Ridout et al 2012). When platform users depict their own drinking practices they generate data that signal their interest in alcohol consumption and its relation to specific times, places and cultural interests (like sport or music).…”
Section: Facebook's "Native" Advertising Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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