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Criminal Justice and Behavior
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Psychological Perspectives on Alcohol Consumption and Interpersonal Aggression

The Potential Role of Individual Differences in Alcohol-Related Criminal Violence

ALAN R. LANG

Florida State University

PAULETTE A. SIBREL

Florida State University

This article selectively reviews psychological research pertinent to the role of drinking in interpersonal aggression. The underlying theme is that individual differences represent a neglected area in studies of the alcohol-aggression relation. Relevant expectancy surveys, popular beliefs about how alcohol affects aggression, and balanced-placebo experiments designed to disentangle psychological and physiological causes of alcohol-related behavior are reviewed in pursuing this theme. Finally, the scant evidence indicating how person variables might influence the determination of aggression through a drinking x person x situation interaction is summarized, and recommendations for future research are made.

Criminal Justice and Behavior, Vol. 16, No. 3, 299-324 (1989)
DOI: 10.1177/0093854889016003004


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