U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Suggested Explanatory Frameworks to Clarify the Alcohol Use/Violence Relationship

NCJ Number
121097
Author(s)
J J Collins
Date Published
1988
Length
15 pages
Annotation
The four explanatory directions proposed to guide and organize future studies in the relationship between drinking and violence are the pathological, cultural, deviance disavowal, and situational frameworks.
Abstract
Until 15 or 20 years ago the concept of disinhibition was the dominant explanatory paradigm in theories about alcohol's role in violent behavior. Alcohol was thought to loosen behavioral constraints by affecting specific brain centers or intellectual capacities. Because the conceptual power of this paradigm has been compromised, and because no replacement scheme has emerged, progress in understanding the relationship of drinking to violence has been slow in the last decade. The first of the explanatory directions, the pathological framework, implies that alcohol use causes violent behavior due to a pathological condition in the drinker. The cultural framework shows that heavy drinking is associated with violence in some cultural groups but not in others. In deviance disavowal, blame and responsibility for behavior after drinking are deflected from the individual and ascribed to drinking itself. The situational view suggests that drinking norms and subsequent behavior vary with the drinking context. Ultimately, comprehensive understanding of the drinking and violence relationship is likely to require that sets of factors from each framework be included in a model that explicates their relationship to each other as well as their independent effects (if any) on violence. 36 references.

Downloads

No download available

Availability