NCJ Number
181445
Journal
European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research Volume: 7 Issue: 4 Dated: 1999 Pages: 509-530
Date Published
1999
Length
22 pages
Annotation
This article examines some of the assumptions underlying appeals to community in crime prevention and control.
Abstract
The article considers the philosophical origins, ambiguities, and tensions within such appeals. It draws explicitly upon the growth of “community safety” and to a lesser extent “restorative justice” in Britain, and considers some of the implications. In particular, it focuses upon the manner in which appeals to community converge and collide with changing social relations which may undermine their progressive potential. The article gives specific attention to the implications of increasing social and spatial dislocation, the commodification of security, and policy debates about a growing underclass. It argues that there is much confusion as to how, and to what extent, communities can contribute to the construction of social order. Within the dynamics of community safety and crime control practices there are dangers that “security differentials” may become increasingly significant characteristics of wealth and status with implications for social exclusion. This questions the extent to which crime is an appropriate vehicle around which to (re)construct open and tolerant communities. Notes, references