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Featured researches published by Jakob Demant.


Addiction Research & Theory | 2006

Constructing maturity through alcohol experience–Focus group interviews with teenagers

Jakob Demant; Margaretha Järvinen

Danish 14- and 15-year-olds are at the top of the European list when it comes to drinking and drunkenness. The aim of this article is to demonstrate how the struggle for social recognition–with alcohol as the central marker–transpires in groups of teenagers in Denmark. This article shows how alcohol experience and positive attitudes towards drinking are related to popularity and influence in the peer group. The function of alcohol in teenagers’ struggle for recognition is so strong that the participants who drink very little or not at all are put under considerable pressure. With alcohol as a central marker of maturity–and the drinking teenagers’ parents described as supporters of this view–non-drinking teenagers come out as the potential losers in the negotiation of status in the groups. The data are drawn from a large qualitative study in which 28 focus group interviews were conducted with Danish teenagers. This article represents a close reading of two of the interviews. Theoretically, the analysis is inspired by symbolic interactionism, Erwin Goffmans dramaturgical approach to social interaction and the post-structuralist reasoning of Judith Butler.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2007

Partying as Everyday Life: Investigations of Teenagers’ Leisure Life

Jakob Demant; Jeanette Østergaard

This article investigates what partying means to Danish adolescents aged 14–16. A new theoretical approach to teenage partying is suggested. It combines the structural anthropological tradition of analysing partying and use of alcohol as a rite de passage with a phenomenological perspective which situates the event in everyday life. By drawing on Maffesolis concept of ‘sociality’ and Lincolns concept of zoning the spatial and social logic of the house, partying is analysed using both qualitative and quantitative material. The analysis suggests that the consumption of alcohol (i.e. collective intoxication) is one way the parents’ dining room is transformed creatively into a space for teenage partying. Hence, the social logic of a party is to consume alcohol collectively as it symbolises commitment to both the party and to the specific group of friends. Finally, attention is drawn to how parties are attractive, not just because of the possibility of experimenting with alcohol, but because they are a way to extend the network of friends. These fragile friendships can be seen as a fluid sociality which constantly demands attention and reassurance. Partying, then, is also a way to reaffirm friendship and is therefore an integrated part of adolescents’ everyday life.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2011

Changing drinking styles in Denmark and Finland. Fragmentation of male and female drinking among young adults.

Jakob Demant; Jukka Törrönen

A traditional heavy intoxication-oriented drinking style, “heroic drinking,” is a central drinking practice in Denmark and Finland, especially among men. However, it seems that another drinking style leading to intoxication, “playful drinking,” has become more prevalent in Denmark as well as in Finland. Playful drinking is characterized by self-presentations in diverse forms of game situations in which you need to play with different aspects of social and bodily styles. We approach the positions of heroic drinking and playful drinking among young adults (between 17 and 23 years) in Denmark and Finland by analyzing how they discuss these two drinking styles in focus groups (N = 16).


Addiction Research & Theory | 2011

Social capital as norms and resources: Focus groups discussing alcohol

Jakob Demant; Margaretha Järvinen

The aim of this article is to analyse the relationship between peer-group social capital and the use of alcohol among young people – as this relationship is expressed in focus group interviews. The main point to be made is that social capital affects alcohol use in two different ways: it incites some forms of drinking (‘controlled drunkenness’) while restricting others (drinking alone, drinking ‘for the wrong reason’, losing control often). Furthermore, the idea behind this article is that social capital is both a background factor influencing participants’ relationship to alcohol and an effect of their drinking experience. We apply Colemans micro-oriented perspective on local network mechanisms – with a specific focus on collective norms negotiated in the focus groups – in combination with Bourdieus definition of social capital as resources. The data used in this article come from focus group interviews with 18–19-year-old Danes.


BMC Public Health | 2016

Alcohol consumption among university students in Ireland and the United Kingdom from 2002 to 2014: a systematic review.

Martin P. Davoren; Jakob Demant; Frances Shiely; Ivan J. Perry

BackgroundAlcohol is a leading cause of global suffering. Europe reports the uppermost volume of alcohol consumption in the world, with Ireland and the United Kingdom reporting the highest levels of binge drinking and drunkenness. Levels of consumption are elevated among university students. Thus, this literature review aims to summarise the current research on alcohol consumption among university students in the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom.MethodsMEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE and PsychInfo were systematically searched for literature from January 2002 until December 2014. Each database was searched using the following search pillars: alcohol, university student, Ireland or the United Kingdom and prevalence studies.ResultsTwo thousand one hundred twenty eight articles were retrieved from electronic database searching. These were title searched for relevance. 113 full texts were retrieved and assessed for eligibility. Of these, 29 articles were deemed to meet inclusion criteria for the review. Almost two thirds of students reported a hazardous alcohol consumption score on the AUDIT scale. Over 20 % reported alcohol problems over their lifetime using CAGE while over 20 % exceed sensible limits each week. Noteworthy is the narrowing of the gender gap throughout the past decade.ConclusionThis is the first review to investigate consumption patterns of university students in Ireland and the United Kingdom. A range of sampling strategies and screening tools are employed in alcohol research which preclude comparability. The current review provides an overview of consumption patterns to guide policy development.


International Journal of Drug Policy | 2013

Affected in the nightclub. A case study of regular clubbers' conflictual practices in nightclubs

Jakob Demant

The nightclub as a space is presented as a free and hedonistic place for pleasure. This space is also part of a wider socio-spatial-economic framework in which various forms of regulation apply to clubbers and the cultivation of affects. This paper researches marginal and contested forms of experiences within a club as a way of understanding the complexities of pleasure. The study does so by addressing experiences through the concept of affects, which is situated within a framework of a non-representational theory of space. Anxiety, pride, anger, shame and embarrassment are embodied simultaneously with the affects of love, joy, sympathy and so on. Alcohol, illicit drugs, bouncers, music and other human or non-human actants are part of the place. It is within this heterogeneous assemblage that affects become embodied. The data consists of 273 cases from a large Copenhagen nightclub where guests have complained about being rejected or being given quarantine. The paper suggests that if the space of the club is approached as being more than a mono-affectual space of either risk or pleasure, then it would be possible to reduce conflicts and produce more inclusive spaces.


Urban Studies | 2014

Youth Drinking in Public Places: The Production of Drinking Spaces in and Outside Nightlife Areas

Jakob Demant; Sara Landolt

This article explores youth drinking in Zurich, Switzerland, on both public squares away from nightlife areas, referred to as ‘square street drinking’ and on the street within the vicinity of nightclubs, defined as ‘club street drinking’. Taking a relational space approach, the analysis adds a social perspective to the dominant economic-political perspective to drinking in urban nightlife zones. The results suggest that the normative landscapes of drinking are constructed differently: the same regulation by police and social workers works differently between the two areas both in terms of inclusion and exclusion as well as in terms of how the material and social dimensions interact. Production and regulation are dependent on how young people participate in these processes. This finding suggests that it would be fruitful to develop a regulation approach on drinking in the post-industrial city that is sensitive to young people as co-producers of space.


Leisure Studies | 2010

Club studies: methodological perspectives for researching drug use in a central youth social space.

Jakob Demant; Signe Ravn; Sidsel Kirstine Thorsen

Club studies are sociological investigations of youth drug use in the social context of the club. By being present at the club, the researcher tries to gain access to a somehow hidden population of drug users who only to a lesser extent – or not at all – perceive their drug use as problematic. This is the large group of people who primarily consider their drug use as a leisure activity, and thus as a means for deriving pleasure. In spite of impressive club studies conducted in both Great Britain and the USA, it seems that, broadly speaking, previous efforts can be characterised as either very broad and/or quantitative or very particular, sub‐cultural and exclusively qualitative. Through a methodological discussion of these studies, this article suggests a mixed‐methods approach to club studies that combines quantitative data, qualitative interviews and ethnography conducted in the club space. By introducing the concept of ‘socionautics’, this article suggests that the researcher travels into the social landscape of young people, clubs and drugs and utilises her ethnographic observations in interviews. An approach like this would cast light upon this very central part of youth leisure life in a systematic and detailed way.


International Journal of Drug Policy | 2016

Mixing politics and crime – The prevalence and decline of political discourse on the cryptomarket

Rasmus Munksgaard; Jakob Demant

BACKGROUND Dread Pirate Roberts, founder of the first cryptomarket for illicit drugs named Silk Road, articulated libertarian political motives for his ventures. Previous research argues that there is a significant political component present or involved in cryptomarket drug dealing which is specifically libertarian. The aim of the paper is to investigate the prevalence of political discourses within discussions of cryptomarket drug dealing, and further to research the potential changes of these over the timespan of the study. METHODS We develop a novel operationalization of discourse analytic concepts which we combine with topic modelling enabling us to study how politics are articulated on cryptomarket forums. We apply the Structural Topic Model on a corpus extracted from crawls of cryptomarket forums encompassing posts dating from 2011 to 2015. RESULTS The topics discussed on cryptomarket forums are primarily centered around the distribution of drugs including discussions of shipping and receiving, product advertisements, and reviews as well as aspects of drug consumption such as testing and consumption. However, on forums whose primary function is aiding operations on a black market, we still observe political matter. We identified one topic which expresses a libertarian discourse that emphasizes the individuals right to non-interference. Over time we observe an increasing prevalence of the libertarian discourse from 2011 to the end of 2013. In the end of 2013 - when Silk Road was seized - we observe an abrupt change in the prevalence of the libertarian discourse. CONCLUSIONS The libertarian political discourse has historically been prevalent on cryptomarket forums. The closure of Silk Road has affected the prevalence of libertarian discourse suggesting that while the closure did not succeed in curtailing the cryptomarket economy, it dampened political sentiments.


Nordic studies on alcohol and drugs | 2007

Youthful Drinking with a Purpose

Jakob Demant

Drawing on a study consisting of 28 focus groups, this paper will discuss how drinking practices and partying is drawn into negotiations of gender and age identity. The article focuses on how boys and girls, aged 14–16, construct identities based on the discourses on alcohol and partying that can be identifed in the focus group data material. The focus group material forms a unique insight into how alcohol and partying are used in these negotiations. Together with Judith Butlers concepts of performance and citation, the concept of intersectionality will form a theoretical background for the discussion of how alcohol is used to perform age and sex in a culturally intelligible way. The girls position themselves as feminine and mature through their drinking and through sexualizing older boys. The “heterosexualizing” of the party-space creates a paradoxical position for the boys of the same age as the girls. They have limited possibility of making impressions on girls their own age, and they cannot turn towards younger girls because that will position them as immature. The intersection of age and sex creates a separation within the party scene, where girls and boys of the same age often attend different parties. The boys end up in same-sex parties where they construct masculinity by way of binge drinking more than in their gender play with the girls.

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Lena Fleig

Free University of Berlin

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