12 research outputs found

    Motivators for change and barriers to help-seeking in Australian problem gamblers

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    The original publication can be found at www.springerlink.comAlthough prevalence studies consistently indicate that many thousands of Australians experience gambling-related problems, only a relatively small proportion of these people seek professional help. This study examines the principal motivations for, and impediments to, help-seeking in a sample of 77 problem gamblers recruited from agencies and the general community. The results indicated that profession help-seeking is predominantly crisis-driven rather than being motived by a gradual recognition of problematic behaviour. Shame, denial and social factors were identified as the most significant barriers to change rather than a lack of knowledge, or dislike of, treatment agencies. The value of early interventions including the screening of gamblers in routine medical consultations and partner support strategies is discussed.Lyn Evans and Paul H. Delfabbrohttp://www.springer.com/medicine/psychiatry/journal/1089

    Electoral Platforms, Implemented Policies, and Abstention

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    Recent studies of American politics evidence that political polarization of both the electorate and the political elite have moved “almost in tandem for the past half century ” (McCarty et al., 2003, p.2), and that party polarization has steadily increased since the 1970s. On the other hand, the empirical literature on party platforms and implemented policies has consistently found an imperfect but non-negligible correlation between electoral platforms and governmental policies: while platforms tend to be polarized, policies are moderate or centrist. However, existing theoretical models of political competition are not manifestly compatible with these observations. In this paper, we distinguish between electoral platforms and implemented poli-cies by incorporating a non-trivial policy-setting process. It follows that voters may care not only about the implemented policy but also about the platform they sup-port with their vote. We find that while parties tend to polarize their positions, the risk of alienating their constituency prevents them from radicalizing. The analysis evidences that the distribution of the electorate, and not only the (expected) location of a pivotal voter, matters in determining policies. Our results are consistent with the observation of polarized platforms and moderate policies, and the alienation and indifference components of abstention
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