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What Keeps Students from Driving under the Influence of Alcohol and Prescription Drugs? The Impact of Legitimacy of the Law, Prudent Behaviour and Perceived Dangerousness. / Machura, Stefan; Matharu, Sunita; Mepham, Faye et al.
Yn: Oñati Socio-legal Series, Cyfrol 9, Rhif 6, 2019.

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Machura S, Matharu S, Mepham F, Smith SL, Aston J. What Keeps Students from Driving under the Influence of Alcohol and Prescription Drugs? The Impact of Legitimacy of the Law, Prudent Behaviour and Perceived Dangerousness. Oñati Socio-legal Series. 2019;9(6). Epub 2019 Medi 16. doi: 10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1076

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TY - JOUR

T1 - What Keeps Students from Driving under the Influence of Alcohol and Prescription Drugs? The Impact of Legitimacy of the Law, Prudent Behaviour and Perceived Dangerousness

AU - Machura, Stefan

AU - Matharu, Sunita

AU - Mepham, Faye

AU - Smith, Sarah Leanne

AU - Aston, Jonathan

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Driving under alcohol or while under the influence of a medication that impedes the ability to control a car are punishable offenses. The study asks if the perceived legitimacy of law, the perceived dangers of driving, including detection by the police, and the individual inclination to engage in risky and imprudent behaviour influence the likelihood of committing those offenses. At a British university, 337 students took part in a questionnaire study. The results show that students are less inclined to drive under alcohol than under medication. Both are variously influenced by practical circumstances like the frequency of driving, of drinking and the actual taking of such medication, even pressures to drive regardless. Driving under medication is also related to legitimacy of law. The difference may come from the absence of a public narrative for driving under medication: some students fall back to their attitude to the law.

AB - Driving under alcohol or while under the influence of a medication that impedes the ability to control a car are punishable offenses. The study asks if the perceived legitimacy of law, the perceived dangers of driving, including detection by the police, and the individual inclination to engage in risky and imprudent behaviour influence the likelihood of committing those offenses. At a British university, 337 students took part in a questionnaire study. The results show that students are less inclined to drive under alcohol than under medication. Both are variously influenced by practical circumstances like the frequency of driving, of drinking and the actual taking of such medication, even pressures to drive regardless. Driving under medication is also related to legitimacy of law. The difference may come from the absence of a public narrative for driving under medication: some students fall back to their attitude to the law.

KW - Legitimacy of law

KW - driving under alcohol

KW - driving under medication

KW - imprudent behaviour

KW - perceived risk

U2 - 10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1076

DO - 10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1076

M3 - Article

VL - 9

JO - Oñati Socio-legal Series

JF - Oñati Socio-legal Series

SN - 2079-5971

IS - 6

ER -