Abstract:Our work contributes through a cultural criminological perspective to a contextualised knowledge of street violence and its constructed meanings; uncertainty, familiarity and strangeness in spaces of urban disadvantage as perceived by Scottish white youths are examined. Youth criminal and antisocial behaviour associated with knifecarrying is widely reported and structures political and media discourses which classify street culture. In our article we argue that a particular symbolic construction of social spac… Show more
“…Pre-placement of knives within the shrubbery of a housing estate or block of flats demonstrates ability to risk assess and control the environment. Holligan et al (2016) and Winlow and Hall (2009) identified something similar from their interview participants who were prepared to strike first and act pre-emptively. Recent expansion of the social field suggests that this assertion, once limited to interpretations of the physical field boundary (gang turf), is now open to wider interpretation.…”
Section: Agency and Taking Controlmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In some ways the normalisation script is bolstered by local neighbourhood passivity and inactivity, or at times a casualised acquiescence to normalised violence which can be read as condoning knife-carrying for protection but which simultaneously generates wider forms of criminal agency. Holligan et al (2016) reported on one interviewed participant who utilised the discourse of Glasgow as 'stab capital of the world' to normalise his weapon-carrying.…”
Section: 'It Depends On What Scale You Want Man Like Violence To Usmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Holligan et al (2016) suggest that knife-carrying for protection arises from a ‘pragmatic analysis of the cultural construction of an uncertain social space’ (p. 147). In social field theory, such admissions are rarely made as they indicate a diminished street capital whereby the actor is not yet fully able to interpret the nuances of Road Life.…”
Section: The Street Gang As a Social Fieldmentioning
Amid rising public concern of knife-enabled crime, this article seeks to review and reframe the contemporary debates on knife crime which remain tied to concepts of fear, protection and fashion. Concepts of social field theory and street capital theory have much to offer in reframing a more contemporary narrative. Through such analysis, knife crime can be redefined as a logical response to the unpredictable asymmetrics of the social field, offering mechanisms for agency and control while providing both a pressure release and opportunity to demonstrate authenticity in ‘The Game’.
“…Pre-placement of knives within the shrubbery of a housing estate or block of flats demonstrates ability to risk assess and control the environment. Holligan et al (2016) and Winlow and Hall (2009) identified something similar from their interview participants who were prepared to strike first and act pre-emptively. Recent expansion of the social field suggests that this assertion, once limited to interpretations of the physical field boundary (gang turf), is now open to wider interpretation.…”
Section: Agency and Taking Controlmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In some ways the normalisation script is bolstered by local neighbourhood passivity and inactivity, or at times a casualised acquiescence to normalised violence which can be read as condoning knife-carrying for protection but which simultaneously generates wider forms of criminal agency. Holligan et al (2016) reported on one interviewed participant who utilised the discourse of Glasgow as 'stab capital of the world' to normalise his weapon-carrying.…”
Section: 'It Depends On What Scale You Want Man Like Violence To Usmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Holligan et al (2016) suggest that knife-carrying for protection arises from a ‘pragmatic analysis of the cultural construction of an uncertain social space’ (p. 147). In social field theory, such admissions are rarely made as they indicate a diminished street capital whereby the actor is not yet fully able to interpret the nuances of Road Life.…”
Section: The Street Gang As a Social Fieldmentioning
Amid rising public concern of knife-enabled crime, this article seeks to review and reframe the contemporary debates on knife crime which remain tied to concepts of fear, protection and fashion. Concepts of social field theory and street capital theory have much to offer in reframing a more contemporary narrative. Through such analysis, knife crime can be redefined as a logical response to the unpredictable asymmetrics of the social field, offering mechanisms for agency and control while providing both a pressure release and opportunity to demonstrate authenticity in ‘The Game’.
“…Prior research has documented how reputations for violence earned in gangs could lead to opportunities for employment in the illicit economy (Holligan, McLean and Deuchar ), and how gangs formed part of the same street culture that more organised criminal enterprise in Scotland grew out of (McLean ; McLean, Densley and Deuchar ). In some cases, gangs provided a pathway into more organised forms of criminality (Fraser ).…”
This article presents insights from qualitative research into organised crime (OC) in Glasgow, Scotland. Interviews were conducted with a sample of 42 current and former offenders with a history of group offending in an attempt to understand variation in the onset, maintenance, and cessation of OC careers. Offending narratives revealed different OC trajectories. Drug dealing was the primary modus operandi of OC groups, but some offenders exhibited versatility and progression to wider criminal activity or a mix of illegitimate activity and legitimate business. Implications for future policing strategies and suggested additional research are outlined in response to these findings.
“…In some British cites, the demise of employment opportunities and weakening of community cohesion will trigger strain that may surface in recourse to the use of violence as a form of street capital enabling criminal governance. Local youths may also respond to the fear of crime by carrying weapons for status and protection (Holligan et al, 2017). Without the availability of recourse to the legal system, grievances and personal slights arising in criminal networks are resolved through codes of violent retribution and notions of natural justice (Coomber and Moyle, 2017; Densley, 2013).…”
The concept of ‘County Lines’ denotes an exploitative type of illegal drug distribution and dealing criminal enterprise that is indicative of the development of new strategies to underpin criminal markets in Britain. It is a growing phenomenon characterizing the evolution and working of drug distribution networks in contemporary Britain which often establish ‘nests’ in the homes of vulnerable persons domiciled within drug traffic hubs. This article draws upon qualitative data generated from interviews with active and former offenders and members of intervention agencies in order to understand more about the denizens of this embryonic criminal world.
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