
Compartir
Título
Regulating Gambling Use through the Overton Window: From an Addictive Behavior to a Social and Epidemiological Problem
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Gambling regulation/legalization
Recreational use
Qualitative study
Overton window
Clasificación UNESCO
6114 Psicología social
Fecha de publicación
2023
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Molina-Fernández, A. J., Robert-Segarra, A., Martín-Herrero, J. A., Sánchez-Iglesias, I., Saiz-Galdós, J., & Fernández-Mora, K. (2023). Regulating Gambling Use through the Overton Window: From an Addictive Behavior to a Social and Epidemiological Problem. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/IJERPH20085481
Resumen
[EN]Abstract: During the last decade, gambling (online and offline) regulation has become a social and
epidemiological problem all around Europe. The aftermaths of this addiction have increased since
the so-called “responsible gambling law”, in the second decade of the 21st century. The Overton
window (OW) strategy is a political theory that describes how the perception of public opinion can be
modified so that ideas that are inconceivable for society become accepted over time. The objective of
this study is to identify whether an OW has been used to bias the adequacy of the gambling debate,
as well as its scientific, legal, and political bases and the main consequences for both the general
population and the major risk groups, especially the consequences in social and health contexts.
The study was conducted by the application of the historical-logical method as the central axis of
analysis and reflection, and the technique of qualitative research content analysis as a procedure in
the process of execution of the scientific task, related to a historical trend study of the research object.
The main consequences found were: the political acceptance of gambling for economical causes and
taxes benefits, the use of popular characters to increase the acceptance of the pattern of behavior, the
inclusion of the gambling operators as agents in the risks control, and the absence of intervention
until the main consequences have been transformed into an epidemiological problem (with social
aftermaths higher than the previously identified related to the gambling problems). Furthermore, the
results suggest the need to implement prevention and health promotion strategies and the adoption
of specific legal measures that regulate the access and the marketing of gambling operators’ activities.
URI
ISSN
1578-2735
DOI
10.3390/IJERPH20085481
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones













