After the Asbo: Extending control over young people's use of public space in England and Wales

被引:6
|
作者
Johnstone, Craig [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Brighton, Criminol, Sch Appl Social Sci, Brighton BN2 4AT, E Sussex, England
关键词
anti-social behaviour; dispersal; elimination; innovation; reform; ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR; POLICY;
D O I
10.1177/0261018316651943
中图分类号
D58 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
摘要
The concept of anti-social behaviour became prominent in the UK in the 1990s when the Labour government constructed it as an important policy challenge and deployed a series of high profile interventions against it. But anti-social behaviour faded significantly from the political agenda once Tony Blair's premiership ended in 2007 and its diminution appeared complete when the most high profile of interventions, the Anti-social Behaviour Order or Asbo, was replaced by the more mundane-sounding Injunction in 2014. This commentary argues, however, that far from the anti-social behaviour control regime softening as government priorities shifted elsewhere, legislation passed in 2014, allied to technological innovation, has increased the potential for those whose presence is considered problematic to be eliminated' from public spaces. This has particular significance for young people, whose discursive association with disorder and greater tendency to congregate in groups make them likely to be the targets of enhanced exclusionary practices.
引用
收藏
页码:716 / 726
页数:11
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [41] Postdigital Bodies: Young People's Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England
    Ringrose, Jessica
    Milne, Betsy
    Horeck, Tanya
    Mendes, Kaitlynn
    YOUTH, 2024, 4 (03): : 1058 - 1075
  • [42] Studying the Long-term Impact of COVID-19 in Kids (SLICK). Healthcare use and costs in children and young people following community-acquired SARS-CoV-2 infection: protocol for an observational study using linked primary and secondary routinely collected healthcare data from England, Scotland and Wales
    Swann, Olivia, V
    Lone, Nazir, I
    Harrison, Ewen M.
    Tomlinson, Laurie A.
    Walker, Alex J.
    Seaborne, Michael J.
    Pollock, Louisa
    Farrell, James
    Hall, Peter S.
    Seth, Sohan
    Williams, Thomas C.
    Preston, Jennifer
    Ainsworth, J. Samantha
    Semple, Freya F.
    Baillie, J. Kenneth
    Katikireddi, Srinivasa, V
    Akbari, Ashley
    Lyons, Ronan
    Simpson, Colin R.
    Semple, Malcolm G.
    Goldacre, Ben
    Brophy, Sinead
    Sheikh, Aziz
    Docherty, Annemarie B.
    BMJ OPEN, 2022, 12 (11):