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Overview
"Anti-social behaviour has, seemingly very quickly, become society's top 'crime and disorder' problem. Recent proposals for 'naming and shaming' young offenders appear to strike a popular chord in many areas. But where has this preoccupation with anti-social behaviour come from? What fears and concerns drive it? What action is the government actually taking and what are the likely consequences?" "This book comprises a critical evaluation of this recent preoccupation with anti-social behaviour. It explores the origins of contemporary discourses and how they have often related to concerns about the behaviour of young people. Anti-social behaviour is examined in the context of the youth justice strategy evolving from the 1998 Crime and Disorder Act. The authors show how a new 'politics of behaviour' connects with recent discourses on 'responsibilisation' and the 'dispersal of discipline' to extend enforcement and criminalisation processes impacting disproportionately upon marginalised young people." The book draws upon the authors' own research on public perceptions of anti-social behaviour, on the manufactured onset of youthful criminal careers and upon the policing of acceptable behaviour, in order to develop and illustrate the arguments of the book. It concludes by suggesting that anti-social behaviour marks the leading edge of a new strategy of 'precautionary injustice' in British crime and disorder management.Book Details
Published
January 11, 2013
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Pages
232
ISBN
9781134043262