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Description
This study, conducted in collaboration with the Salvation Army, Inc., analyzes the impact of a reduction of bar hours in Anchorage, Alaska in October 1981. Prior to the bar hours change, Anchorage bars were closed for only three hours each day. Following the change, bars were closed for eight hours on weekdays and six hours on weekends. Phase I of the study analyzed trends in alcohol distribution and alcohol-related incidents from July 1980 to March 1982. Phase II focused on activities on Fourth Avenue in downtown Anchorage, an area widely perceived as a locus of alcohol-related social disorder. Researchers observed activity in and around Fourth Avenue businesses and conducted semi-structured interviews with employees of designated businesses, social control agents, and emergency service personnel to gather information on perceived positive and negative effects of the bar hours change.
Publication Date
4-13-1982
Keywords
alcohol & alcohol abuse, Anchorage, Alaska, crime, public disorder
Recommended Citation
Johnson, Knowlton W. and Conn, Stephen, "The Bar Hours Change in Anchorage: A Preliminary Study" (1982). Reports. 142.
https://scholarworks.alaska.edu/uaa_justice_reports/142
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10714