TY - CHAP
T1 - FOOTBALL BETTING AMONG UNIVERSITY STUDENTS IN GHANA
AU - Yendork, Joana Salifu
AU - Asante, Kwaku Oppong
AU - Quarshie, Emmanuel Nii Boye
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Football is a popular sport among young people across Africa, incited by the heavy presence of European football that has become central to youth cultures, everyday social routines, forms of consumption and opportunities for establishing social status. A growing body of evidence suggests increasing trends in harmful gambling behaviours in African youth, while the proliferation of football betting particularly remains a critical potential risk for negative mental health outcomes among young people in Sub-Saharan Africa. This chapter draws on original empirical data from a web-based cross-sectional survey to examine the prevalence estimates and associations of socio-demographic and behavioural factors with football betting among young adults attending university in Ghana. It draws on a multivariable logistic regression model to assess the associations with football betting. Our findings point not only to the growing salience of football betting among male demographics, but also the role of peer culture, alcohol and media as predominant sources of participants’ initiation of football betting. Moreover, participants indicated the motive ‘to make money’ as their single major motivation, which raises the prospect that football betting is used as a means to mitigate the adverse effects of unemployment. Overall, the study points to a need for harm prevention strategies that align more closely with public health approaches focused on students, their families, their communities and their universities/ schools.
AB - Football is a popular sport among young people across Africa, incited by the heavy presence of European football that has become central to youth cultures, everyday social routines, forms of consumption and opportunities for establishing social status. A growing body of evidence suggests increasing trends in harmful gambling behaviours in African youth, while the proliferation of football betting particularly remains a critical potential risk for negative mental health outcomes among young people in Sub-Saharan Africa. This chapter draws on original empirical data from a web-based cross-sectional survey to examine the prevalence estimates and associations of socio-demographic and behavioural factors with football betting among young adults attending university in Ghana. It draws on a multivariable logistic regression model to assess the associations with football betting. Our findings point not only to the growing salience of football betting among male demographics, but also the role of peer culture, alcohol and media as predominant sources of participants’ initiation of football betting. Moreover, participants indicated the motive ‘to make money’ as their single major motivation, which raises the prospect that football betting is used as a means to mitigate the adverse effects of unemployment. Overall, the study points to a need for harm prevention strategies that align more closely with public health approaches focused on students, their families, their communities and their universities/ schools.
KW - Football betting
KW - gambling
KW - Ghana
KW - prevalence
KW - sport betting
KW - young adults
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85190087409&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/S1476-285420230000018007
DO - 10.1108/S1476-285420230000018007
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85190087409
T3 - Research in the Sociology of Sport
SP - 89
EP - 107
BT - Research in the Sociology of Sport
PB - Emerald Publishing
ER -