Psychological effects on college students of raising the drinking age.

J Newman
Author Information
  1. J Newman: Child Research and Study Center, State University of New York, Albany 12222.

Abstract

The current policy of raising the drinking age seems likely to have psychological costs for adolescents, including deterioration of their relationship with adult society. Colleges are likely to be the sites of heightened adolescent discontent because so many undergraduates are affected by the change in law. College administrators have the opportunity to reduce some of the psychological effects and ensure that adolescent discontent is channeled into developmentally enhancing activities.

MeSH Term

Accidents, Traffic
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Alcohol Drinking
Humans
Legislation as Topic
Personality Development
Students
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0raisingdrinkingagelikelypsychologicaladolescentdiscontenteffectscurrentpolicyseemscostsadolescentsincludingdeteriorationrelationshipadultsocietyCollegessitesheightenedmanyundergraduatesaffectedchangelawCollegeadministratorsopportunityreduceensurechanneleddevelopmentallyenhancingactivitiesPsychologicalcollegestudents

Similar Articles

Cited By

No available data.