
Contents
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Illicit Leisure Illicit Leisure
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Public Drinking Public Drinking
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Drinking Alone and Addiction Drinking Alone and Addiction
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Neighborhood Context, Social Distance, and Stigma Neighborhood Context, Social Distance, and Stigma
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Bars Bars
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Bars as Connectors Bars as Connectors
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Bridging Constraints Bridging Constraints
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Good Bars and Bad Bars Good Bars and Bad Bars
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Boundaries and Belonging Boundaries and Belonging
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Six Drinking: Beers, Bars, and Bad Behavior
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Published:February 2017
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Abstract
This chapter continues the examination of social perceptions of disorder. To an outsider passing through the neighborhood, Riverwest’s numerous bars, pronounced public drinking and seeming tolerance of public intoxication may be seen as cause for concern. However, residents’ perceptions of local drinking establishments and activities are more varied. Bars can be serious trouble spots or valued amenities. Those with visible addictions can be nuisances or accepted neighbors. Porch drinking can degrade the neighborhood’s reputation or signal a vibrant public life. Definitions of uncivil or out-of-place practices are embedded in constructions of cultural membership and social distance. This chapter demonstrates how Riverwest residents’ sense of who and what belong in the neighborhood is shaped by their accumulated experiences and situated in residents’ framing of the neighborhood and its trajectory. The chapter concludes with a consideration of the consequences of these collective perceptions of “disorder” for neighborhood engagement, investment, and stability.
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