
Rave parties may be on the rise and gender, educational attainment and place of residence seem to influence the attitude of youth towards drinking but over two-thirds of India's young generation consider alcohol consumption to be unacceptable, according to a new book.
"Indian Youth in a Transforming World: Attitudes and Perceptions" comprises a nationwide study based on face-to-face interviews with 5,000 youth to capture the popular mood of this important demographic segment of contemporary India.
Authored by Peter Ronald DeSouza, Sanjay Kumar and Sandeep Shastri, the book records the perceptions of youth of various issues, ranging from modernity, development, globalisation and unemployment, to leisure and lifestyle, social networks and family, and their hopes and aspirations for the future.
While this book, published by Sage, breaks some myths about them, on the one hand, it helps strengthen some commonly shared perceptions about them, on the other.
The authors say that the leisure habits of the youth are linked to multiple factors.
"As many as 64 per cent of the youth felt that alcohol consumption is not at all acceptable. One out of every 10 youth said that it is acceptable and 15 per cent felt that it is necessary to maintain one's place in social circles.
Another 10 per cent did not express any opinion on the matter.
"However, it is clear that alcohol consumption is by and large frowned upon by the youth. Gender, educational attainment and place of residence seem to have a great impact on the attitude of the youth towards drinking," it says.
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