• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 162
  • 48
  • 18
  • 11
  • 9
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 283
  • 283
  • 168
  • 64
  • 50
  • 42
  • 42
  • 40
  • 37
  • 30
  • 28
  • 24
  • 21
  • 20
  • 20
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
171

Druhy a značky alkoholických nápojov ako výraz osobnosti / Types and brands of alcoholic beverages as an expression of personality

Pavlišin, Dominik January 2013 (has links)
Thesis focuses on describing the consumer behavior on the alcoholic beverages market in the Czech Republic. In addition to quantitative analysis, which uses the MML - TGI data from Median Ltd., thesis also includes qualitative research with further analysis of selected segments. Based on the findings from analysis, recommendation for creating a new alcoholic beverage is made according to lifestyle of the consumer.
172

Komparace vlivu spotřební daně na spotřebu a státní rozpočet ČR u tabákových výrobků a alkoholu v letech 2000-2015 / Comparison of the impact of excise taxes on consumption and the state budget of the Czech Republic on tobacco products and alcoholic beverages in the years 2000-2015

Kras, Jakub January 2015 (has links)
This diploma thesis allows getting complex summary about important aspects of tax theory with special focus on excise taxes. The thesis is an analysis of excise tax on alcoholic beverages and tobacco products in the Czech Republic in the years 2000-2015. The analysis includes an assessment of the impact of rates increase of specific excise taxes on the state budget, the consumption of selected products and the number of detected tax evasions. The thesis demonstrated a positive correlation between the increase in excise taxes and revenues from alcoholic beverages and tobacco products. Increasing rates but also leads to a decrease in consumption of these products and has an impact on the number of detected cases of tax evasions in the area of excise taxes.
173

Reasons for not drinking and pressures to drink : a survey of adolescent abstainers

Mangham, Colin Richard January 1985 (has links)
Alcohol use among adolescents has been the subject of considerable research. A burgeoning literature exists identifying correlates and factors in teenage drinking. However, little is known about the adolescent abstaining from alcohol. The target of this study was this cohort of abstaining adolescents. The reasons for not drinking and the pressures to drink perceived among a sample of middle adolescent (grade 9) non-drinkers was investigated. The study was a survey administered in three parts. First, an alcohol-use survey was administered to all participating grade 9 students in two school districts. A second questionnaire was administered to 72 subjects reporting non-use of alcohol on the initial survey. Thirty of these subjects were then interviewed. Negative attitudes toward alcohol and drinking, a concern about alcohol's effects on health, and a dislike for the taste of alcoholic beverages were among the strongest reasons for not drinking given by the sample. The subjects' own attitudes about alcohol appear to be more important factors in their decisions to abstain than the direct influence of peers, parents or others. As in previous studies, religiosity was a strongly reported factor in the abstinence of a number (25%) of the subjects. It appears that at least for this sample of non-drinking adolescents, the perceived pressure to drink from peers, adults, the media or society generally is very limited. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
174

Co maximalizuje spotřební daň? Evidence z přirozeného experimentu / What maximizes consumption tax? Evidence from a natural experiment

Hradečná, Anna January 2013 (has links)
Tax-setting policy belongs to the main duties of politicians from time immemorial. Since those times, people are questioning whether politicians, while setting taxes, are pursuing mainly interests of publi or their own. In this thesis, I am studying this question in the industry of alcoholic beverages, regulation of it's consumption and production. I am using two statistical models, simple model of partial equilibria and AIDS model (Almost Ideal Demand System), to estimate own price elasticity of demand for beer, wine and spirits in selected post-soviet countries: Azerbaijan, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania and Russian Federation. Linear model with mixed effects is estimated to uncover the strength and direction of dependency of alcohol policy on own price elasticity of demand for alcoholic beverages in the above mentioned countries. Results show, that politicians of Azerbaijan, Georgia, Lithuania and Russian Federation set the alcohol policy in accordance with maximization of tax revenue hypothesis, while Latvians seems to be rather vote maximizers. I have expected the politicians in Baltic states to behave similar and also least populistically from studied countries. But my expectations were not fulfilled.
175

A influência da temperatura na condução de dois processos fermentativos para produção de cachaça / Influence of the temperature in the conduction of two fermentative processes for cachaça production

Vivian Santoro Braga 13 December 2006 (has links)
O presente trabalho teve como objetivo estudar o comportamento de três linhagens de leveduras, sendo duas da espécie S. cerevisiae, (Y-904 e CAT) e uma da espécie S. bayanus, (EC) em duas temperaturas de fermentação 20 e 32 °C, usando dois meios, YEPD (meio controle) e caldo de cana-de-açúcar clarificado. As fermentações foram realizadas em câmara de BOD, estático, em frascos de erlenmeyer, com 200 mL de meio e 1 g de fermento seco. A concentração de açúcar foi padronizada para 150,0 g L-1 de ART (açúcares redutores totais) e 15,2 °brix, nos ensaios que se utilizou o caldo de cana como substrato. As fermentações que se utilizou apenas o caldo de cana foram realizadas em balões de cinco litros, em ambas as temperaturas, nas quais as três linhagens de levedura foram avaliadas, através da análise cromatográfica do destilado. Para a obtenção dos destilados foi montado em laboratório um destilador feito totalmente de vidro. Nos ensaios que se utilizou o meio controle e o caldo de cana nas duas temperaturas de fermentação, as leveduras foram avaliadas quanto ao crescimento celular, o açúcar residual e o teor alcoólico. As amostras dos destilados provenientes das fermentações que utilizaram apenas o caldo de cana como mosto, foram avaliadas quanto: ésteres, aldeídos, acidez volátil, álcoois superiores, álcool metílico, furfural, carbamato de etila, acroleína e cobre. As três linhagens ensaiadas apresentaram diferenças estatísticas entre si e entre os meios utilizados. O objetivo não foi a comparação entre as duas temperaturas e sim avaliar o comportamento das linhagens e verificar a possibilidade de se efetuar fermentações a 20 e a 32 °C. Pela análise cromatográfica alguns componentes voláteis como ésteres, aldeídos, acidez volátil, álcoois superiores e álcool metílico, apresentaram diferenças estatísticas, isto é, a formação desses compostos foi influenciada pela temperatura e pelas linhagens utilizadas. O teor de ésteres aumentou com o decréscimo da temperatura para S. bayanus. A acidez volátil aumentou com o acréscimo da temperatura, assim como ocorreu com a formação de álcoois superiores e de álcool metílico que foi mais elevada a 32 °C do que a 20 °C. Enquanto que outros componentes como: furfural, carbamato de etila, acroleína e cobre não apresentaram diferenças em relação a variação da temperatura ou pelas leveduras utilizadas. / The present work had the aim of studying the behavior of three yeast strains, considering two from Saccharomyces cerevisiae species (Y-904 and CAT) and one from Saccharomyces bayanus species (EC), in two fermentation temperatures, 20 and 32 C, utilizing two mediums, YEPD (control medium) and clarified sugarcane juice. The fermentations were carried out in stable BOD chambers, in bottles of Erlenmeyer, with 200 mL of each medium and 1 g of dried yeast. The sugarcane concentration was standardized to 150g/L of ART (total reductor sugar) and to 15,2 °brix in the essay that was used the sugarcane juice as medium. The fermentations that were used only the sugarcane juice were carried out into 5 liters balloons capacity, in both temperatures, where the three yeasts strains were evaluated through chromatography analysis of the distillates. In order to obtain the distillates, it was built a all-glass distillation apparatus. The yeasts were analyzed as the cell growth, the residual sugar and the alcoholic concentration at the essays which were used the control medium and the sugar cane juice in both temperatures. It was evaluated esters, aldehydes, acidity, higher alcohols, methyl alcohol, furfural, acrolein and copper in the distillates samples which came from the fermentations that used only the sugarcane juice as wort. The three yeast strains showed differences between each other and between the mediums. The aim of this study was not to compare the results between the temperatures, but it was to evaluate the behavior of the strains and find out the possibility of making fermentations at 20 and 32°C. The chromatography analysis showed statistical differences from volatile compounds as: esters, aldehydes, acidity, higher alcohols and methyl alcohol. These results show that the formation of these compounds was influenced by temperature and by the yeats strains used. The content of esters increased when temperature decreased for S. bayanus. The acidity increased when the temperature also increased, the same occurred with higher alcohol formation and methyl alcohol formation. The methyl alcohol formation was higher at 32 C than 20 °C. The others compounds as: furfural, ethyl carbamate, acrolein and copper did not show differences related to the temperature variation and the yeasts strains used.
176

Alcohol abuse amongst the youth in Musina Town

Mafa, Prudence January 2019 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.(Social Work)) -- University of Limpopo, 2019 / Alcohol consumption by young people continues to be a social problem that is associated with major health complications later in life. More youth engage in alcohol consumption frequently with a decreasing age of debut. The current study aimed at exploring and describing the prevalence, patterns and context of youth alcohol consumption in Musina Town, Limpopo Province. A convergence mixed method was employed. This was complemented by an exploratory-descriptive design. Using random stratified and purposive sampling techniques, data was collected from grade 11 learners by way of a survey and a focus group discussion. Data collected from the study show that there is a high prevalence of alcohol use amongst the youth in Musina as almost two thirds (61%) of the survey participants reported to be current alcohol users. Patterns of consumption include drinking during weekends and holidays with binge drinking and drinking until drunkenness being the main forms of alcohol consumption. There was no difference in binge drinking between male and female alcohol drinkers, with 22% of each gender reporting to consume more than five drinks a session. Contexts of alcohol consumption by the youth include drinking at various social gatherings, school, at home, unlicensed liquor outlets, drinking to have fun or as a coping mechanism. Young alcohol consumers have little to no concern about their drinking behaviour, which is exacerbated by alcohol drinking permissive culture and the availability of alcohol. Keywords: Youth, Alcohol consumption, Prevalence, Patterns, Availability
177

Effects of televised alcohol advertisements on the drinking behaviour of youth:a case study of Praktiseer community in Greater Tubatse Municipality

Mapulane, Mawethu Glemar January 2014 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Media Studies)) --University of Limpopo, 2014. / This study investigates the effects of televised alcohol advertisements on the drinking behaviour of youth in Praktiseer community of the Greater Tubatse Municipality. The nature and trends of alcohol consumption in South Africa are examined. The study also focuses on the impact of alcohol exposure, and the costs alcohol abuse can incur on the individual and society at large. The types of advertising models and the regulatory systems in advertising were identified. Data were collected through a self- administered questionnaire. The study hypothesised that the exposure to alcohol advertisements influences alcohol abuse among the youth. However, alcohol industry claims that the youth is not its niche market and hence should not be blamed for any abusive behaviour of alcohol by the youth. Just like the few studies interested in the effects of alcohol advertising, alcohol exposure and alcohol abuse, the present study also reveals that televised alcohol advertisements have a great influence in alcohol consumption among the youth in Praktiseer community.
178

Drink Specials, Drink Special Laws, and Fatal Motor Vehicle Crashes in the United States

Puac-Polanco, Victor David January 2020 (has links)
The adverse health and safety consequences of excessive alcohol consumption are a leading problem around the world. Alcoholic beverages are a routine part of socializing in many societies. However, alcohol is also a significant contributor to worldwide morbidity, disability, and mortality. To lessen the harm produced by alcohol, governments have adopted different alcohol control policies. These control policies can be group into four basic strategies: deterrence, prevention, communications and outreach, and alcohol treatment. Among the prevention measures, restricting physical access to alcohol by limiting the alcohol outlets' density, raising the legal age to purchase alcohol, and reducing the affordability of alcohol through taxation have been extensively shown as cost-effective and feasible measures against alcohol-related harms. However, there are still topics related to the affordability of alcohol that have not been investigated. The role of promotional price practices at on-premises alcohol outlets on health and social outcomes, and the effects of policies enacted to prevent these practices on motor vehicle crashes remained an unexplored research topic. The main goals of this dissertation were to summarize evidence regarding the health effects of drink specials and to estimate the effects of policies restricting drink special practices as preventive tools for fatal motor vehicle crashes. Specifically, I summarized the research evidence of the effects of drink special practices on health and social outcomes (Aim 1). I examined the association between drink special laws and alcohol-related fatal motor vehicle crashes contrasting results for two methodological approaches, difference-in-difference-in-differences (Aim 2) and synthetic controls (Aim 3). This dissertation contains five chapters. The introduction in chapter one provides a background review of relevant literature that serves as the conceptual framework for this dissertation and an overview of chapters two, three, four, and five. The systematic review of the literature relevant to Aim 1 is presented in chapter two. This review included studies on the effects that drink specials and drink special laws have on alcohol consumption, binge drinking, and alcohol-related harms. Twelve studies examined the effect of drink specials in seven countries between 1978 and 2018. Consistent evidence supported associations between drink specials and increased alcohol consumption, heavy drinking, alcohol intoxication, and other alcohol-related outcomes. For aims 2 and 3, I examined 36-years of data from the U.S. Department of Transportation, Census Bureau, and NIH’s Alcohol Policy Information System and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism from 1982 to 2017. In chapter three, I presented results from difference-in-difference-in-differences analyses of the effects of implementing six drink special laws on alcohol- and non-alcohol-related motor vehicle fatal crash rates in the United States (U.S.). I assessed exposure to implementation as any law, number of laws, and each law. Random effects generalized least squares regression models adjusted for the proportion of males in the state, youth involved in fatal crashes, gallons of ethanol per capita among the population age 21 years and older, and autonomy index were fitted across 24 treated and 18 non-treated states. Results revealed that the implementation of any drink special law was associated with reductions in overall and alcohol-related fatal crash rates compared to untreated states. Also, drink special laws mitigated incremental rates of non-alcohol related crashes among treated states with any drink special law compared to untreated states. In chapter four, I presented results from synthetic control analyses for single and multiple treated units. I assessed the association between drink special laws and alcohol-related fatal motor vehicle crashes and adjusted for the same covariates as in chapter three. Results in chapter four indicated that states treated with any drink special law reduced alcohol-related fatal crash rates only in years three, five, and ten post-implementation compared to the synthetic control trend. The effects of any drink special law were more consistent at different times in the post-implementation for reducing non-alcohol-related fatal crash rates than the synthetic control trend. Findings for the number of laws implemented and each drink special laws were mixed. Chapter five presents a synthesis and discussion of findings in chapters two, three, and four, as well as policy recommendations for stakeholders and future research.
179

The attitudes of adolescents, parents and grandparents towards adolescent problems in a rapidly changing society

Nyembe, Boy Timothy January 1988 (has links)
A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts, UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND In partial fulfilment for the degree MASTER OF ARTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY in the Department of Psychology, 1988. / The researcher's aim in this study was to identify and compare the attitudes of adolescents, parents and grandparents towards three adolescent problem variables. The researcher's point of departure was to review relevant literature on the generation gap phenomenon, adolescent premarital sexual relations, delinquent behaviour and the use of alcoholic beverages. A. Likert-type scale was constructed to measure the attitudes of adolescents, parents and grandparents towards adolescent premarital sexual relations) delinquent behaviour and use of alcoholic beverages. Three samples comprising 30 adolescents, 30 parents and 30 grandparents were randomly selected from the seven wards/ sections of the 42 Hill Location, Harrismith. Respondents were from the Zulu, South-Sotho, Tswana .and Xhosa ethnic groups. Illiterate and educated subjects were included in the study. The t-test and Chi-Square (ifi test results highlighted significant differences between the attitudes of adolescents and parents towards premarital sexual relations. The differences between the attitudes of adolescents and those of grandparents towards this variable were also significant:. The attitudes of parents and grandparents towards premarital sexual relations were not significantly different. These findings tended to support previous research studies which stated that parents and grandparents were traditionally more conservative in their attitude towards sexuality than were adolescents. Modern adolescents who lived in a society where sex was discussed more openly seemed to feel that they should engage in premarital sexual relations. It seemed the generation gap between adolescents and parents,and to a greater extent between adolescent and grandparent, had increased. Results indicated insignificant differences between the attitudes of adolescents, parents and grandparents towards adolescent delinquent behaviour. All three generations seemed to agree that modern adolescents acquired much information from their friends. In a modern rapidly changing South African society, traditional authority seemed to have lost most of its impact on the adolescent's bahaviour. Adolescents seemed to believe that parents had failed to change the socio¬political situation hence they had to take the lead. Parents themselves seemed to be puzzled and confused by the rapidly changing, contemporary, technocratic and violently divided society. Significant differences between the adolescent and parent attitudes and between adolescent and grandparent attitudes towards adolescent use of alcoholic beverages were indicated in this study. The insignificant differences between the attitudes of parents and grandparents towards this variable seemed to indicate that parents and grandparents were against adolescent use of alcoholic beverages. On the other hand, adolescents seemed to feel that they should indulge in drinking alcoholic beverages. In the modern South African society, adolescents saw liquor advertised on television and in literature and thus indulged in drinking alcoholic beverages. It was recommended that whatever the desired politico-social change, both parents and adolescents could be made aware that communication and dialogue between them are a sine-qua-non towards the solution and alleviation of their problems. Parents may be motivated to discuss with adolescents their views and feelings about premarital sexual relations and vice versa. The dialogue could be encouraged in public meetings, seminars, on television and radio. Parents could be encouraged to listen to the views of adolescents in order to guide them. Parents may be made to accept the fact that adolescents live during a time and in a society where they may express both their positive and negative opinions regarding certain issues. Community programmes such as therapeutic groups, youth clubs and recreation clubs could provide adolescents with an opportunity of expressing their views, developing their social skills and improving relationships with others. Information concerning problems that are associated with the use of alcoholic beverages could be made available to adolescents during the discussions and advertisements. The aim could be to assist adolescents to cope with problems and to feel happy without indulging in drinking alcoholic beverages.
180

Resistance Exercise and Alcohol: Combined Effects on Physiology and Performance

Levitt, Danielle E. 08 1900 (has links)
Resistance exercise (RE) training is a well-known and effective method for promoting increases in muscle mass and strength. A single bout of RE induces physiological disturbances that require coordinated activation of the immune system and intramuscular signaling in order to return the tissue to homeostasis and adapt to the RE challenge. On the other hand, acute binge alcohol consumption can affect the immune response to an inflammatory challenge, intramuscular anabolic signaling, and muscle protein synthesis, and the effects of alcohol on these processes are opposite that of RE. Furthermore, individuals who report more frequent exercise also report a greater frequency of binge drinking. However, few investigations exist regarding the effects of binge alcohol consumed after a bout of RE on RE-induced physiological changes and performance recovery. Therefore, the overarching purpose of the investigations contained within this dissertation was to investigate the effect of alcohol consumed after RE on the RE-induced changes in mTOR pathway signaling, muscle protein synthesis, inflammatory capacity, strength recovery, and power recovery. Although RE increased mTOR pathway signaling and inflammatory capacity after exercise and reduced maximal strength and explosive power the day after exercise, we observed no effects of alcohol (1.09 g ethanol∙kg-1 lean body mass, designed to result in a peak blood alcohol concentration of approximately 0.12 g∙dl-1) consumed after RE on mTOR pathway signaling, 24-hour rates of muscle protein synthesis, inflammatory capacity, or strength and power recovery in resistance-trained individuals.

Page generated in 0.1471 seconds