Commercial gambling recently has expanded exponentially in Australia such that annual gambling losses now total over $12 billion dollars, representing $886 per adult and 3.4 percent of household disposable income (Tasmanian Gaming Commission 2000). In tandem with this expansion, problem gambling has emerged as a significant social issue. This paper documents how the epistemic community, governments, gambling operators and pressure groups have advanced this issue by tracking their changing stances and the widening expectational gaps between them. It develops an integrated lifecycle model of problem gambling to demonstrate how these four stakeholders have propelled the issue along its lifecycle to the point where resolving it requires substantial alterations in how gambling is operated, marketed and managed.
Journal article
The emergence of problem gambling as a corporate social issue in Australia
International Gambling Studies, Vol.2(1), pp.101-122
2002
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- The emergence of problem gambling as a corporate social issue in Australia
- Creators
- Nerilee Hing - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- International Gambling Studies, Vol.2(1), pp.101-122
- Identifiers
- 1018; 991012820734102368
- Academic Unit
- Centre for Gambling Education and Research; Faculty of Education; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts; School of Business and Tourism
- Resource Type
- Journal article