Casswell, SallyMorojele, NeoWilliams, Petal PetersenChaiyasong, SurasakGordon, RossGray-Phillip, GaileCuong, Pham VietMacKintosh, Anne-MarieHalliday, SharonRailton, ReneeRanderson, SteveParry, Charles D. H.2019-06-122019-06-122017-12-05http://hdl.handle.net/10625/57600Findings of the study show that in countries with fewer resources, alcohol policies are less effective because of lack of implementation and enforcement and, in the case of marketing, lack of regulation. This has implications for increases in consumption as a result of the expanding distribution and marketing of commercial alcohol and consequent increases in alcohol-related harm. This study uses the Alcohol Environment Protocol, an International Alcohol Control study research tool, which documents the alcohol policy environment by standardised collection of data from administrative sources, observational studies, and interviews with key informants to allow for cross-country comparison and change over time.application/pdfenREGULATIONENFORCEMENTSOCI-ECONOMICSALCOHOLDISEASE CONTROLNEW ZEALANDSCOTLANDSOUTH AFRICATHAILANDVIET NAMSAINT KITTS AND NEVISGLOBALAlcohol environment protocol : a new tool for alcohol policyJournal Article (peer-reviewed)