AndersonP. (1993). Population and High-risk Approaches Both Necessary to Reduce Alcohol Harm. Addiction. Vol. 88, No. 2, pp. 170-174.
2.
BaconS.D. (1957). Social Settings Conducive to Alcoholism—A Sociological Approach to a Medical Problem. Journal of the American Medical Association. Vol. 164, No. 2, pp. 177-181.
3.
BalesR.F. (1962). Attitudes Toward Drinking in the Irish Culture. In Society, Culture, and Drinking Patterns. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. New York & London. Edited by D.J. Pittman & C.R. Snyder. Pp. 157-187.
4.
BanwellC. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Cook Islands Women Living in Auckland. Department of Anthropology. University of Auckland. Auckland.
5.
BarthesR. (1972). Mythologies. Selected and translated from the French by A. Lavers. Hill and Wang. New York.
6.
BollingerC. (1967). Grog's Own Country—The Story of Liquor Licensing in New Zealand. Minerva. Auckland.
7.
BrennanT. (1989). Towards the Cultural History of Alcohol in France. Journal of Social History. Vol. 23, No. 1, pp. 71-92.
8.
BuckleyA.D. (1983). Playful Rebellion: Social Control and the Framing of Experience in an Ulster Community. Man. Vol. 18, pp. 383-395.
9.
BurnsT.F. (1980). Getting Rowdy with the Boys. Journal of Drug Issues. Spring 1980, pp. 273-286.
10.
CaetanoR. & HerdD. (1988). Drinking in Different Social Contexts Among White, Black, and Hispanic Men. The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. Vol. 61, pp. 243-258.
11.
CameronB. (1899). In Fair New Zealand. New Zealand Bible. Tract, and Book Society.
12.
ChristieG.T.C. & RichP. (1989). The Meaning of Alcohol Use in a Male Working Class Gang. Paper presented at the World Federation for Mental Health 1989 World Congress, 21-25August1989, Auckland, New Zealand.
13.
ClaytonF. (1988). Savour the Word—The Language of Alcohol. Grantham House. Wellington.
14.
ClinardM.B. (1962). The Public Drinking House and Society. In Society, Culture, and Drinking Patterns. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. New York & London. Edited by D.J. Pittman & C.R. Snyder. Pp. 270-292.
15.
ConnorW.D. (1979). Alcohol and Soviet Society. In Beliefs, Behaviors, & Alcoholic Beverages—A Cross-Cultural Survey. Edited by Mac Marshall. The University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. Pp. 433-449.
16.
CrawfordA. (1987). Attitudes about Alcoholism: A General Review. Drug and Alcohol Dependence. Vol. 19, pp. 279-311.
17.
CritchlowB. (1983). Blaming the Booze: The Attribution of Responsibility for Drunken Behavior. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. Vol. 9. No. 3, pp. 451-473.
18.
CritchlowB. (1986). The Powers of John Barleycorn—Beliefs about the Effects of Alcohol on Social Behavior. American Psychologist. July1986. pp. 751-764.
19.
CruzJ.D. (1988). Booze and Blues: Alcohol and Black Popular Music 1920–1930. Contemporary Drug Problems. Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 149-186.
20.
DaviesJ. & StacyB. (1972). Teenagers and Alcohol—A Developmental Study in Glasgow. Volume II. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. London.
21.
Eldred-GriggS. (1984). Pleasures of the Flesh—Sex & Drugs in Colonial New Zealand 1840–1915. Reed. Wellington.
22.
EverettM.W.WaddellJ.O. & HeathD. (editors) (1976). Cross-Cultural Approaches to the Study of Alcohol. Mouton Publishers. The Hague.
23.
FairweatherJ.R. & CampbellH. (1990). Public Drinking and Social Organisation in Methven and Mt. Somers. Research Report No. 207, December1990. Agribusiness and Economics Research Unit, Lincoln University. Canterbury, New Zealand.
24.
FalkP. & SulkunenP. (1983). Drinking on the Screen. An Analysis of a Mythical Male Fantasy in Finnish Films. Social Science Information. Vol. 22, No. 3, pp. 387-410.
25.
FieldM.G. (1959). Russia Today. In Drinking and Intoxication—Selected Readings in Social Attitudes and Control. Edited by McCarthyRaymond G.. College & University Press. New Haven, CT. Pp. 141-148.
26.
FilloyR.A. (1988). Of Drink and Detectives: The Genesis and Function of a Literary Convention. Contemporary Drug Problems. Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 249-271.
27.
GebbieF. & McGregorJ. (1979). The Incredible 8-ounce Dream. Collins. Auckland.
28.
Gibson.J.A. & WeinbergD. (1980). In Vino Communitas: Wine and Identity in a Swiss Alpine Village. Anthropological Quarterly. Vol. 53, No. 2, pp. 111-121.
29.
GoffmanE. (1971). Relations in Public—Microstudies of the Public Order. Allen Lane. The Penguin Press.London.
30.
GoftonL. (1983). Real Ale and Real Men. New Society. 17 November1983, pp. 271-273.
31.
GotohM. (1994). Alcohol Dependence of Women in Japan. Addiction. Vol. 89. No. 8. pp, 953-954.
32.
GrayA. (1983). The Jones Men—100 New Zealand Men Talk About Their Lives. A.H. & A.W. Reed.Wellington.
33.
GusfieldJ.R. (1985). Alcohol Problems—An Interactionist View. In Currents in Alcohol Research and the Prevention of Alcohol Problems. Hans Huber Publishers. Berne, Stuttgart, Toronto. Edited by J. Von Wartburg, P. Magnenat, R. Müller & S. Wyss. Pp. 71-81.
34.
GusfieldJ.R. (1987). Passage to Play: Rituals of Drinking Time in American Society. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drinking from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by DouglasM.. Pp. 73-90.
35.
HageP. (1972). Münchner Beer Categories. In Culture and Cognition—Rules, Maps and Plans. Chandler Publishing Co.San Francisco. Edited by SpradleyJ.P.. Pp. 263-278.
HeathD.B. (1975). A Critical Review of Ethnographic Studies of Alcohol Use. In Research Advances in Alcohol and Drug Problems. Vol. 2. Wiley. New York. Pp. 1-92.
38.
HeathD.B. (1982). In Other Cultures, They Also Drink. In Alcohol, Science and Society Revisited. The University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor & Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies. New Brunswick, N.J. Edited by GombergE.L., et al. Pp. 63-79.
39.
HeathD.B. (1987). A Decade of Development in the Anthropological Study of Alcohol Use: 1970–1980. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drink from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by DouglasMary.. Pp. 16-69.
40.
HeilbronnL.M. (1988). What Does Alcohol Mean? Alcohol's Use as a Symbolic Code. Contemporary Drug Problems. Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 229-248.
41.
HelmanC. (1984). Culture, Health and Illness—An Introduction for Health Professionals. Wright. Bristol.
42.
HodgesI.D. (1984). Make Mine a Large One: Competitive Styles in Two Male Beer Drinking Situations. Paper presented at the NZ Association of Social Anthropologists’ annual conference, August1984.
43.
HodgesI.D. (1985). Drinking Vernacular and the Negotiation of Intimacy. Unpublished paper.
44.
HodgesI.D. (1989). Make Mine a Large One—An Anthropological Study of the Rules and Symbols of Drinking Rituals Intended to Reconstruct Social Relations Between Men in Southern New Zealand. Make Mine a Large One—An Anthropological Study of the Rules and Symbols of Drinking Rituals Intended to Reconstruct Social Relations Between Men in Southern New Zealand.
45.
HonigmannJ.J. (1979). Dynamics of Drinking in an Austrian Village. In Beliefs, Behaviors, & Alcoholic Beverages—A Cross-Cultural Survey. 4. Ann Arbor. Edited by MarshallMac.. Pp. 414-428.
46.
HowlandR.W. & HowlandJ.W. (1978). 200 Years of Drinking in the United States: Evolution of the Disease Concept. In Drinking: Alcohol in American Society—Issues and Current Research. Nelson-Hall. Chicago. Edited by EwingJ.A. & RouseB.A.. Pp. 39-60.
47.
HuizingaJ. (1950). Homo Ludens—A Study of the Play-Element in Culture. The Beacon Press. Boston.
48.
HuxleyA. (1960). Drugs That Shape Men's Minds. In Collected Essays. Chatto & Windus. London. Pp. 336-346.
49.
JellinekE.M. (1960). The Disease Concept of Alcoholism. Hillhouse Press.New Haven, CT.
50.
JellinekE.M. (1977). The Symbolism of Drinking—A Culture-Historical Approach. Journal of Studies on Alcohol. Vol. 38, No. 5, pp. 852-866.
51.
JohnsonP. (1986). Drinking, Temperance, and the Construction of Identity in Nineteenth-Century America. Social Science Information. Vol. 25, No. 2, pp. 521-530.
52.
KeelingS. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Women Students at Otago University. Department of Anthropology. University of Auckland.
53.
KellerM. (1964). Introduction. In Drinking Among Teenagers—A Sociological Interpretation of Alcohol Use by High-School Students. Drinking Among Teenagers—A Sociological Interpretation of Alcohol Use by High-School Students.
54.
LangA.R. (1983). Drinking and Disinhibition: Contributions From Psychological Research. In Alcohol and Disinhibition: Nature and Meaning of the Link. NIAAA Research Monograph No. 12. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. Edited by RoomRobin. & GaryCollins. Pp. 48-90.
55.
LangA.R. (1985). The Social Psychology of Drinking and Human Sexuality. Journal of Drug Issues. Spring 1985, pp. 273-289.
56.
LeighB.C. (1995). A Thing So Fallen, and So Vile: Images of Drinking and Sexuality in Women. Contemporary Drug Problems, Vol. 22, pp. 415-434.
57.
LemleR. & MishkindM.E. (1989). Alcohol and Masculinity. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. Vol. 6, pp. 213-222.
58.
Lesbian Alcohol & Drug Action (LADA) (1988). Lesbians Like Us—The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of New Zealand Women Project. Lesbians Like Us—The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of New Zealand Women Project.
MacEwenI. & KinderP. (1991). Making Visible—Improving Services for Lesbians and Gay Men in Alcohol & Drug Treatment and Health Promotion. Making Visible—Improving Services for Lesbians and Gay Men in Alcohol & Drug Treatment and Health Promotion.
61.
McKinlayA.P. (1959). Non-Classical Peoples. Drinking and Intoxication—Selected Readings in Social Attitudes and Control. College & University Press. New Haven, CT. Edited by Raymond G. McCarthy. Pp. 62-72.
62.
McMathM. (1989). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Christ-church Career Women. In The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some New Zealand Career Women. McMathM.KnightS.ParkJ.BanwellC.. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Auckland. Pp. 2-103.
63.
McMathM. (1990). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some New Zealand Military Women. Department of Anthropology. University of Auckland. Auckland.
64.
MaddoxG.L. & McCallB.C. (1964). Drinking Among Teen-Agers—A Sociological Interpretation of Alcohol Use by High-School Students. Publications Division, Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies.New Brunswick, NJ.
65.
MarsG. (1987). Longshore Drinking, Economic Security and Union Politics in Newfoundland. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drinking from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by Mary Douglas. Pp. 91-101.
66.
MarshallM. (1979a). Weekend Warriors—Alcohol in a Micronesian Culture. Mayfield Publishing Company. Palo Alto, CA.
67.
MarshallM. (1979b). Conclusions. In Beliefs, Behaviors, & Alcoholic Beverages—A Cross-Cultural Survey. The University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. Edited by MarshallMac.. Pp. 451-457.
68.
MarshallM. (1982). Introduction: Twenty Years After Deprohibition. In Through A Glass Darkly: Beer and Modernization in Papua New Guinea. Edited by MacMarshall.Institute of Social and Economic Research. Boroko, Papua New Guinea. Pp. 3-13.
69.
MarshallM. (1983). “Four Hundred Rabbits ”: An Anthropological View of Ethanol as a Disinhibitor. In Alcohol and Disinhibition: Nature and Meaning of the Link. NIAAA Research Monograph No. 12. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. Edited by RoomRobin. & CollinsGary.. Pp. 186-204.
70.
Medina-MoraE. (1994). Drinking and the Oppression of Women: The Mexican Experience. Addiction. Vol. 89, No. 8, pp. 958-960.
71.
MelchionneT.L. (1985). Alcohol Beverage Use in the Falkland Islands Camp: An Ethnography of a Cultural Domain. A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School, New Brunswick, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Graduate Program in Anthropology.
72.
NeichS. & ParkJ. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Samoan Women in Auckland. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Auckland.
73.
NgokweyN. (1987). Varieties of palm wine among the Lele of the Kasai. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drinking from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by MaryDouglas. Pp. 113-121.
74.
NorrisP. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Young Women in Christchurch. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland.
75.
O'DonnellP. (1982). The San Francisco Forty-Niner [sic] Victory Celebration: Festival Drinking in an Urban Setting. Drinking and Drug Practices Surveyor. Vol. 18, pp. 35-39.
76.
PaakkanenP. (1986). Cultural Continuity in Finnish Drinking: Alcohol in Finnish Literature in 1911-1912 and 1972. Contemporary Drug Problems. Vol. 13, pp. 187-211.
77.
ParkJ. (1984). Towards an Ethnography of Alcohol in New Zealand: A Review and Annotated Bibliography of Local and Overseas Literature. A Report to the Alcoholic Liquor Advisory Council. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Auckland. June1984. (Preliminary report.)
78.
ParkJ. (1987). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Women in the Suburb of Mt. Eden. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Auckland.
79.
PartanenJ. (1983). Towards a Theory of Intoxication. In Alcohol and Disinhibition: Nature and Meaning of the Link. NIAAA Research Monograph No. 12. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. Edited by RobinRoom. & GaryCollins. Pp. 27-41.
80.
PartanenJ. (1991). Sociability and Intoxication—Alcohol and Drinking in Kenya, Africa and the Modern World. Vol. 39. The Finnish Foundation for Alcohol Studies. Helsinki.
81.
Paton-Simpson (formerly Simpson), G.R. (1991). Constructing a Social History of the Meaning of Alcohol to European New Zealanders—An exploratory study into the creation of a symbolic interactionist history of alcohol in Pakeha New Zealand based on the “qualitative content analysis ” of prepared cultural products. A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Sociology. University of Auckland. Auckland.
82.
Paton-Simpson (formerly Simpson), G.R. (1992). Social Interactions Involving Alcohol and the Production, Reproduction & Transformation of Interpretations Made of Drinking and Intoxication—Scope for a Symbolic Interactionist Analysis. The Drinking and Drug Practices Surveyor. No. 24,p. 1, pp. 13-16.
83.
Paton-Simpson (formerly Simpson), G.R. (1995). “Underconsumption” of Alcohol as a Form of Deviance—Minimum Drinking Norms in New Zealand Society and the Implications of Their Production and Reproduction During Social Occasions. “Underconsumption” of Alcohol as a Form of Deviance—Minimum Drinking Norms in New Zealand Society and the Implications of Their Production and Reproduction During Social Occasions.
84.
PhillipsJ. (1987). A Man's Country? The Image of the Pakeha Male—A History. Penguin Books. Auckland & Harmondsworth.
85.
PophamR.E. & YawneyC.D. (1977). Editors’ Foreword to The Symbolism of Drinking by E.M. Jellinek. Journal of Studies on Alcohol. Vol. 38, No. 5, pp. 849-851.
86.
PostmanN.NystromC.StrateL. & WeingartnerC. (1987). Myths, Men & Beer: An analysis of beer commercials on broadcast television, 1987 AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Washington, DC.
87.
PringleJ.K. & HoughtonR.M. (1984). The Role of Alcohol in Business: A Pilot Study. Business Development Centre. University of Otago. Dunedin.
88.
PrusR. (1983). Drinking as Activity—An Interactionist Analysis. Journal of Studies on Alcohol. Vol. 44, No. 3, pp. 460-475.
89.
RehfischF. (1987). Competitive Beer Drinking Among the Mambila. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drinking from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by Mary Douglas. Pp. 135-145.
90.
RoebuckJ. (1986). Sociability in a Black Outdoor Drinking Place. Studies in Symbolic Interaction. Vol. 7, Part A, pp. 161-197.
91.
RoomR. (1982). Alcohol as an Issue in Papua New Guinea: A View from the Outside. In Through a Glass Darkly: Beer and Modernization in Papua New Guinea. Monograph 18. Edited by Mac Marshall. Boroko. Papua New Guinea. IASER Press. Pp. 441-450.
92.
RoomR. (1983). Introduction. In Alcohol and Disinhibition: Nature and Meaning of the Link. NIAAA Research Monograph No. 12. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. Edited by Robin Room & Gary Collins. Pp. v-viii.
93.
RoomR. (1984). A “Reverence for Strong Drink ”: The Lost Generation and the Elevation of Alcohol in American Culture. Journal of Studies on Alcohol. Vol. 45, No. 6, pp. 540-546.
94.
RoomR. (1985). Alcohol as a Cause: Empirical Links and Social Definitions. In Currents in Alcohol Research and the Prevention of Alcohol Problems. Hans Huber. Berne, Stuttgart and Toronto. Edited by J. Von Wartburg, P. Magnenat, R. Müller & S. Wyss. Pp. 11-19.
95.
RoomR. (1988a). The Dialectic of Drinking in Australian Life: From the Rum Corps to the Wine Column. Australian Drug and Alcohol Review. Vol. 7, pp. 413-437.
96.
RoomR. (1988b). The Movies and the Wettening of America: The Media as Amplifiers of Cultural Change. British Journal of Addiction. Vol. 83, pp. 11-18.
97.
RoomR. (1989). Alcoholism and Alcoholics Anonymous in U.S. Films, 1945–1962: The Party Ends for the “Wet Generations. ” Journal of Studies on Alcohol. Vol. 50, No. 4, pp. 368-383.
98.
RoomR. & CollinsG. (editors) (1983). Alcohol and Disinhibition. Nature and Meaning of the Link. NIAAA Research Monograph No. 12. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC.
99.
RoomR. & RoizenR. (1990). Studying Shifts in the Cultural Position of Alcohol in the U.S. Paper presented at the 16th Annual Alcohol Epidemiology Symposium, Budapest, 3-8June1990.
100.
RouseB.A. & EwingJ.A. (1978). An Overview of Drinking Behaviors and Social Policies. In Drinking: Alcohol in American Society—Issues and Current Research. Nelson-Hall. Chicago. Edited by EwingJ.A. & RouseB.A.. Pp. 339-381.
101.
RoutledgeM. (1979). Young People and Alcohol—A Summary Report. New Zealand Council for Educational Research. Alcoholic Liquor Advisory Council. Wellington.
102.
RoutledgeM. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Older New Zealand Women. The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Older New Zealand Women.
103.
Royal College of Psychiatrists (1986). Alcohol: Our Favourite Drug: New Report on Alcohol and Alcohol-related Problems from a Special Committee of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Tavistock Publications. London.
104.
SadounR.LolliG. & SilvermanM. (1965). Drinking in French Culture. Publications Division. Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies. New Brunswick, NJ.
105.
SandmaierM. (1980). Bacchantic Maidens and Temperate Daughters: A Historical Perspective on Female Alcohol Use. Alcohol Health and Research World. Vol. 4, No. 4, pp. 41-51. Simpson: See Paton-Simpson.
106.
SimpuraJ. (1983). Beyond Drinking: Social Meanings of Drinking, Other Activities and Drinking Contexts. Paper presented at the meeting of the Alcohol Epidemiology Section of the International Council on Alcohol and Addictions. Padua, Italy. June20-24, 1983.
107.
SmithR. (1992). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Invercargill Women. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland.Auckland.
108.
SmithR. & McMathM. (1988). The Place of Alcohol in the Lives of Some Rural Eastern-Southland Women. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Auckland.
109.
SnyderC.R.HigginsR.L. & StuckyR.J. (1983). Excuses—Masquerades in Search of Grace. John Wiley & Sons. New York.
110.
StoneG.P. (1962). Drinking Styles and Status Arrangements. In Society, Culture, and Drinking Patterns. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. New York & London. Edited by D.J. Pittman & C.R. Snyder. Pp. 121-140.
111.
SulkunenP. (1982). Norms. Meanings, Functions—Three Approaches to Cultural Explanation of Alcohol Use. Paper presented to the International Group for Comparative Alcohol Studies. Schloss Hüningen, Switzerland. October17-22, 1982.
112.
SulkunenP. (1983). Alcohol Consumption and the Transformation of Living Conditions—A Comparative Study. In Research Advances in Alcohol and Drug Problems. Vol. 7. Plenum Publishing Corporation Edited by GlaserSmart., KalantIsrael. & Schmidt. Pp. 247-297.
113.
ThorntonM.A. (1987). Sekt vs Schnapps in an Austrian Village. In Constructive Drinking—Perspectives on Drinking from Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Edited by Mary Douglas. Pp. 102-112.
114.
TyrrellI.R. (1979). Sobering Up—From Temperance to Prohibition in Antebellum America, 1800-. 1860 Greenwood Press. Westport & London.
115.
UnnithanN.P. (1985). A Cross-National Perspective on the Evolution of Alcohol Prohibition. The International Journal of the Addictions. Vol. 20, No. 4, pp. 591-604.
116.
WalshD. (1979). Alcoholism and the Irish. In Beliefs, Behaviors, & Alcoholic Beverages—A Cross-Cultural Survey. The University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. Edited by Mac Marshall. Pp. 394-404.
117.
WarrenH.GriffithsC. & Huygens, 1. (1989). Our Shout—Women and Alcohol. Our Shout—Women and Alcohol.