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Bingo! Game gives researchers lessons on how to control gambling

Academics explore how the seemingly sedate game of housey-housey has attracted many different kinds of government intervention

Published on
July 21, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Man playing bingo, Camden Town Bingo Hall, London
Source: Alamy

An academic has published the results of an in-depth three-year project looking at how issues of gambling regulation can be informed by one of the most popular but perhaps least talked about games that are played for money: bingo.

Kate Bedford, reader in law at the University of Kent, has 鈥減layed bingo my whole life, both at home and with female family members at commercial bingo halls鈥.

However, she doesn鈥檛 know anyone who goes to casinos, and so she has long found it odd that 鈥渃onversations and policy debates about gambling and how to regulate it are always about casinos鈥.

There are a number of reasons, in Dr Bedford鈥檚 view, why bingo has been almost ignored. It is enjoyed largely by 鈥渁 distinctive demographic of older, working-class women 鈥 or First Nation/Native American players in North America 鈥 which struggles to be taken seriously.聽Conversations about law and policy tend to ignore that demographic.鈥

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Furthermore, the game can straddle the boundary between the commercial and the charitable sector, as when, for example, it is used to raise money for church groups, village groups or parent-teacher associations.

After an initial pilot carried out in Thanet, Dr Bedford secured funding from the Economic and Social Research Council for three years鈥 research, which has just been published as .

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Some of the main results and the broader issues arising were also discussed at a conference, held at Kent last month, titled All Bets Are Off: Reflecting Critically on Gambling Regulation within and across Borders.

The Bingo Project focuses on the different ways that bingo is regulated in Brazil, Canada, England and Wales and the European Union and incorporates insights from more than 200 interviewees.

One bingo manager describes his job as 鈥渞ob[bing] old ladies of their pensions鈥. An old-timer recalls 鈥減laying with old friends down the pub for slabs of meat鈥. The researchers also took part in games (they stress that 鈥渁t no point was any ESRC money using for gambling鈥) and even witnessed 鈥渄rag queen bingo callers simulat[ing] sex acts with players when particular numbers were drawn鈥.

In Brazil, the report explains, bingo has rather surprisingly been caught up in 鈥渃orruption, organised crime and money laundering scandals鈥, 鈥渁cquired鈥enacing connotations鈥 and 鈥渂een driven largely underground鈥, so the key question is 鈥渉ow trust can be rebuilt鈥 and the game legalised again.

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In the UK, as Dr Bedford puts it, it is generally seen as 鈥渟oft, social, slow-paced and low-stakes鈥. It is precisely because it is perceived and treated by the authorities so differently in different places that it can help us develop 鈥渘ew ways of thinking about gambling regulation more generally鈥.

matthew.reisz@tesglobal.com

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Print headline: Bingo! Game gives prize insights into how to control gambling

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