An Affordable Wager: The Wider Implications of Regulatory Innovations to Address Vulnerability in Online Gambling

Kate Bedford*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

The British government is introducing new regulatory measures to address gambling harm, including affordability checks on online players that rely on cross-operators data sharing. This article seeks to understand these measures, and their limits. Section 1 recaps what we already know about differentiated restrictions on access to gambling, including as manifest in recent state-industry efforts to deploy online gambling technologies to identify and preempt gambling harm. Section 2 summarises agreed and proposed changes to British online gambling regulation since 2019, focusing in depth on affordability checks for players and the related imperative to develop a ‘single customer view’ of play. Section 3 outlines two grounds for concern about the measures, rooted in the industry’s enthusiasm for affordability checks, and ii. the implications for groups of customers who may already be disadvantaged and hyper-surveilled. I raise these concerns in an attempt to identify a way out of an impasse, such that urgent concerns about gambling harm do not translate so readily into regulatory efforts to differentially restrict access to ever-expanding groups of adults considered vulnerable.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)31-50
Number of pages20
JournalCritical Gambling Studies
Volume4
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Gambling Funding Disclosure:
•2022: £66,000 for a three-year PhD studentship to explore the role of law in preventing and addressing gambling harms, funded by Gamble Aware. Start delayed until 2023. At my request, the funding contract for this project includes provisions expressly focused on independence of the PhD researcher and supervising academic team. It is available on request.
•2022: CAN$500 honorarium to present (remotely) as a keynote speaker at the annual Alberta Gambling Research Institute conference (Banff). The research presented (which was not funded by AGRI, or any other external body) was on sumptuary law and gambling.
•2013-6: PI on an Economic and Social Research Council large research grant (£717, 864 FEC) exploring gambling regulation (ES/J02385X/1, A Full House: Developing A New Socio-Legal Theory of Global Gambling Regulation).
•2012: CAN $10,000 for socio-legal research into bingo regulation in Alberta, from the Alberta Gaming Research Institute.

Keywords

  • Affordability
  • harm reduction technology
  • UK

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
  • Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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