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Erschienen in: Journal of Gambling Studies 1/2014

01.03.2014 | Original Paper

‘Risky Places?’: Mapping Gambling Machine Density and Socio-Economic Deprivation

verfasst von: Heather Wardle, Ruth Keily, Gaynor Astbury, Gerda Reith

Erschienen in: Journal of Gambling Studies | Ausgabe 1/2014

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Abstract

The aims of this project were to map the location and density of gambling machines in Britain; to explore whether geographic areas with higher densities of machines exist and to examine the socio-economic characteristics of these areas relative to others. Using geospatial analysis of premises records, we identified 8861 Machine Zones which were areas with a 400 meter radius around gambling machine venue and 384 High Density Machine Zones (HDMZ) with 1 or more gambling machine per hectare. There was a significant correlation between machine density and socio-economic deprivation. HDMZs had greater levels of income deprivation, more economically inactive people and a younger age profile than other areas; 37 % of those living in HDMZs were economically inactive compared with 33 % of those in non-machine areas. HDMZs were in seaside locations but also New Towns or satellite towns to major urban areas. Area affluence explains some of this pattern; of the New Towns with HDMZs, 78 % were in New Towns with a high proportion of low income areas. We therefore concluded that the distribution of gambling machines in Great Britain, in line with other international jurisdictions, displays a significant association with areas of socio-economic deprivation. The profile of the resident population living in HDMZs mirrors the profile of those most at-risk of experiencing harm from gambling. This spatial pattern has important implications for assessing the relationship between gambling availability and gambling-related harm, and for the future development of policy, harm-prevention and treatment strategies.
Fußnoten
1
Full technical details about how the number of machines per venue were estimate are given in Wardle et al. 2011a. Alternatively, please contact the authors for a copy or further discussion of methods.
 
2
Output Areas are continuous area units covering the UK, built for and used to represent census-based and other demographic statistics. They are demographically designed to have similar population sizes and be as socially homogenous as possible and they allow for finer resolution of data analysis. In 2001 the minimum threshold population was 100.
 
3
Lower Super Output Areas (LSOAs) are akin to Output Areas (OAs). They are built from blocks of Output Areas and have a mean population of 1,500.
 
4
Population-weighted OA centroids are point locations of OA situated towards where the majority of people within that area live `on the ground'.
 
5
Defined as the 27 British towns created under the New Towns Act 1946 or rapidly expanded under its provisions or the replacement 1964 Act.
 
6
This used the 74 largest resorts in England by population based on Department for Communities and Local Government benchmarking study; no equivalent listing exists for Wales or Scotland.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
‘Risky Places?’: Mapping Gambling Machine Density and Socio-Economic Deprivation
verfasst von
Heather Wardle
Ruth Keily
Gaynor Astbury
Gerda Reith
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2014
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Gambling Studies / Ausgabe 1/2014
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-3602
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10899-012-9349-2

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