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Towards Citta Sicure?: Political Action and Institutional Conflict in Contemporary Preventive and Safety Policies in Italy

NCJ Number
211164
Journal
Theoretical Criminology Volume: 9 Issue: 3 Dated: August 2005 Pages: 307-323
Author(s)
Rossella Selmini
Date Published
August 2005
Length
17 pages
Annotation
This paper addresses the issue of the local safety policies in the Italian context, outlining how the origin and development of this approach to crime control is the result of some convergent processes and socio-political dynamics.
Abstract
One of the most prominent phenomena of the last decades in the field of crime control policies in many western countries is the development of policies and programs, of discourses and languages which share the common attempt to single out new approaches to crime prevention and safety or the need to shift resources and focus towards crime prevention, rather than on more reactive and coercive forms of policing and criminal justice. This paper explores some of the structural and cultural factors in the field of local safety and crime prevention policies developed in Italy during the last decade adding more credence to the hypothesis that what has been most influential is related mainly to the institutional dimension and to the role played by intentional political actors. The paper focuses on the origin, features, and definition of local governance of safety, the institutional conflict which is at the origin of these policies, the content of the local safety projects, and the character of partnerships and of communities’ involvement in local safety strategies. Notes, references