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Article

Identifying innovative approaches to the temporal availability of alcohol in Great Britain—a policy analysis

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Citation

Cook M, Nicholls J, Mitchell G, O'Donnell R & Fitzgerald N (2025) Identifying innovative approaches to the temporal availability of alcohol in Great Britain—a policy analysis. Drugs: Education, Prevention, and Policy. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687637.2025.2490580

Abstract
Background In Great Britain, local authorities responsible for alcohol premises licensing produce a statement of licensing policy setting out how they intend to exercise their statutory licensing functions including on trading hours. We aimed to describe and compare these policies on alcohol trading hours, including their interpretation and application of laws and guidance. Methods Policies were obtained from the websites of all 366 local licensing authorities and uploaded to NVivo. Using content analysis, relevant text was located through manual searching and coded inductively. Results Many local authorities do not explicitly seek to place controls on trading hours, while others create complex circumstances under which extended hours may be granted. Setting out core or matrix hours is the best example in the findings of local authorities applying their limited discretion to implement the law in ways that suit their needs. Conclusion Although licensing is ostensibly a policy system devolved to local areas, power remains at the centre in national legislation and guidance. Resultantly, local discretion is highly constrained especially in England/Wales. There is a need to attend to the details of statutory instruments to understand how headline principles and objectives can be made workable in practice for local authorities and boards.

Keywords
Alcohol licencing; trading hours; policy; temporal availability; public health

StatusEarly Online
Funders
Publication date online31/05/2025
Date accepted by journal02/04/2025
ISSN0968-7637
eISSN1465-3370

People (5)

Dr Megan Cook

Dr Megan Cook

ISMH Hastings Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Niamh Fitzgerald

Professor Niamh Fitzgerald

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr Gemma Mitchell

Dr Gemma Mitchell

ISMH Hastings Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr James Nicholls

Dr James Nicholls

Senior Lecturer in Public Health, Health Sciences Stirling

Dr Rachel O'Donnell

Dr Rachel O'Donnell

Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

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