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The Relationship between Social Capital and Alcohol Use

Research on social capital and alcohol consumption among college students. Examining differences among various student populations and exploring the role of social networks in gaining social capital through drinking.

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The Relationship between Social Capital and Alcohol Use

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  1. The Relationship between Social Capital and Alcohol Use American College Health Association Annual Meeting, June 4, 2010 Julie A. White NahokoKawakyuO’Connor University of Rochester, Warner Graduate School of Education

  2. About Us • Julie • Health Education, Social Norms, Gender and Health • Critical Sociological and Multicultural Theories • Community Colleges • Financial Aid Policy • Nahoko • Financial Aid Policy • Social and Class Stratification and Reproduction • Assessment and Evaluation • Research Methods

  3. About the Research Team • Margaret Yerdon, Ph.D. candidate • Andrew Wall, Ph.D.

  4. Presentation Goals

  5. Re-examination of current framework: Ideas to Consider

  6. Re-examination of current framework: Current Paradigms

  7. Conceptual Framework: Social Justice North, 2006

  8. Conceptual Framework: Social Justice * Alcohol consumption as a social justice issue: Ensuring our institutions are just, equitable environments, rather than social structures that reify social inequities.

  9. Re-examination of current framework: Reasons for Drinking

  10. Conceptual Framework: Sociological Framework

  11. Symbolic Interactionism

  12. Social Capital Theory (Bourdieu, 1989) Social field and habitus are not benign; they tend to reproduce the power relationships with social contexts

  13. Consider… Social capital is “the thesis that privileged individuals maintain their position by using their connections with other privileged people” (Field, 2008, p. 31)

  14. Re-Examining College Alcohol Consumption

  15. Research Questions

  16. Methods

  17. Preliminary Results

  18. The Students N= 530; response rate= 47.41%

  19. Research Question #1: Are there differences and similarities in the different student populations in alcohol consumption and its role in accessing social capital?

  20. Different populations • Students who are in an NCAA team drink more than students who are not members of a NCAA sports team. • Drinks/week = 5.613 + 3.858 (athlete) • Fraternity members drink more than non-members. • Drinks/ week = 7.126 + 14.124 (fraternity) • Women have a significantly lower rate of alcohol consumption than men. • Drinks/week = 5.323 + 6.286 (men) • Students at 2-year institutions report significantly lower alcohol consumption than students at 4-year institutions. • Drinks/week = 4.714 +4.045 (4 year institution)

  21. Goal 3: Results Access to Social Capital • Athletes report a significantly higher access to social capital through alcohol consumption than those who are not part of this social network (mean = 3.89, s.d.=.893, t(293)=-5.26, p≤.001). • Members of community service organizations do not differ in their perception of access to social capital through drinking than non-members (mean=3.45, s.d.= 1.34, t(10.84)=-.45, p>.05) • Academic Greek organizations do not differ in their perception of access to social capital, but social Greek organizations report an increase in access to social capital through drinking.

  22. Research Question #2: How does the consumption of alcohol in certain social networks allow members of the network to gain social capital?

  23. Using Social Capital Theory • In certain social networks (fields), there is a social norm (habitus) that alcohol consumption leads to increased social benefits and resources (capital). • There is a difference in perceived access to social capital between different types of social networks.

  24. Examples from the Data • Students revealed that the alcohol consumption of a prospective member was a notable factor of fit into the organization. • Data revealed that if students do not want to drink, they will not go to the parties where they know they are serving alcohol and choose to do something else. • It was understood that the norm of certain social spaces was to consume alcohol. • Alcohol use functions as a gatekeeper to social networks. Access to social group membership and benefit is at times restricted based upon self-commitment to non-use.

  25. Research Question 3: How do hegemonic notions of masculinity and femininity adhere within different social networks? (community college students)

  26. Gender norms and age • There are no significant age-related differences in adherence to hegemonic gender norms for women. F(1, 102) = .003, p=.960. • Average hegemonic gender norms scores of men aged 17-24 (M=15.22 SD=2.16) are significantly different from the average hegemonic gender norms scores of men 25 and over (M=13, SD=2.00). t (27) =2.765, p =.010

  27. Gender and amount of drinking

  28. Women and masculine norms

  29. Women and masculine norms

  30. Implications

  31. Summary

  32. Questions?

  33. Contacts • Julie A. White julie.white@warner.rochester.edu (585) 262-1665 Twitter: CCEdJWhite • NahokoKawakyu O’Connor nahoko.kawakyuoconnor@warner.rochester.edu (585) 402-0678 • Andrew F. Wall afwall@warner.rochester.edu

  34. References • Bourdieu, P. (1985). The social space and the genesis of groups. Theory and Society, 14(6). 723-744. • Bourdieu, P. (1989). Social space and symbolic power. Sociological theory, 7(1). 14-25. • Capraro, R.L. (2000). Why college men drink: Alcohol, adventure, and the paradox of masculinity. Journal of American College Health (48), 307-315. • Cooley, C. (1902). Human nature and the social order. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. • Cooper, M.L. (1994). Motivations for alcohol use among adolescents: Development and validation of a four-factor model. Psychological Assessment, 6, 117-128. • Good, G.E., Schopp, L.H., Thomson, D., Hathaway, S.L., Mazurek, M.O., Sanford-Martens, T.C. (2008). Men with serious injuries: Relations among masculinity, age, and alcohol use. Rehabilitation Psychology (53)1, 39-45. • Lynch, S. (1990). Edgework: A social psychological analysis of voluntary risk taking. American Journal of Sociology, 95(4), 851-886. • Montemurro, B. & McClure, B. 2005. Changing gender norms for alcohol consumption: Social drinking and lowered inhibitions at bachelorette parties. Sex Roles (52)5/6, 279-288.

  35. References • North, C.E. (2006). More than words? Delving into the substantive meaning(s) of “social justice” in education. Review of Educational Research, 76(4), 507-535. • Peters, B. L. & Stringham, E. (2006). No booze? You may lose: Why drinkers earn more money than nondrinkers. Journal of Labor Research, 28(3). 411-421. • Sheffield, F.D., Darkes, J., Del Boca, F.K., & Goldman, M.S. (2005). Binge drinking and alcohol-related problems among community college students Implications for prevention policy. Journal of American College Health, 54(3). 137-141. • Weaver, J. B., III, & Sargent, S. L. (2007). GRI-14: Gender Role Inventory (14 Items). In R. A. Reynolds, R. Woods, & J. Baker (Eds.), Handbook of research on electronic surveys and measurement (pp. 367-370). Hershey, PA: Idea Group Reference. • Wechsler, H., & Kuo, M. (2003). Watering down the drinks: The moderating effect of college demographics on alcohol use of high-risk groups. American Journal of Public Health, 93(11), 1929-1933. • Yeung, King-To, and Martin, John Levi. (2003). The looking glass self: An empirical test and elaboration. Social Forces81 (3), pp.843-879.

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