The ecology of football-related crime and disorder

Numerous studies have been conducted on football ‘hooliganism’ with the majority of this work ignoring the immediate, environmental conditions that facilitate opportunities for crime in the football match day context. Consequently, the existing theoretical framework for explaining why crime emerges...

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Main Author: Kurland, J.
Published: University College London (University of London) 2014
Subjects:
364
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.644420
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6444202016-08-04T03:28:50ZThe ecology of football-related crime and disorderKurland, J.2014Numerous studies have been conducted on football ‘hooliganism’ with the majority of this work ignoring the immediate, environmental conditions that facilitate opportunities for crime in the football match day context. Consequently, the existing theoretical framework for explaining why crime emerges during football matches remains incomplete. This thesis aims to fill this gap for understanding modern football-related crime and disorder. The thesis uses a predominantly environmental criminology framework to explore whether crime opportunity theories can make sense of crime patterns observed around previously unexplored English domestic football stadia. It is crime event-oriented, focussing on how variation in the ecology of the area around stadia on match days and a set of counterfactual days when the stadium is not used facilitates different criminal opportunities. This is achieved primarily through the analysis of police-recorded crime data for three kilometre areas surrounding a sample of five stadia for the period 2005- 2010. The thesis focuses on three components of crime events - where they occur, when they occur, and why a disproportionate amount of it clusters in some neighbourhoods and not others. Despite the contrasting physical environment around the five stadia, the findings suggest very similar spatial and temporal crime patterns in the area surrounding stadia when they are used relative to when they are not and thus lend support to environmental theories of crime in the football context. The findings also help draw attention to where and when crime is elevated on football match days. The implications of the research for reducing the unintended and unwanted side-effect of football that is desired for the positive utilities it brings, in particular the practicality of employing situational crime prevention in the context of English domestic football are discussed.364University College London (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.644420http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1456112/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 364
spellingShingle 364
Kurland, J.
The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
description Numerous studies have been conducted on football ‘hooliganism’ with the majority of this work ignoring the immediate, environmental conditions that facilitate opportunities for crime in the football match day context. Consequently, the existing theoretical framework for explaining why crime emerges during football matches remains incomplete. This thesis aims to fill this gap for understanding modern football-related crime and disorder. The thesis uses a predominantly environmental criminology framework to explore whether crime opportunity theories can make sense of crime patterns observed around previously unexplored English domestic football stadia. It is crime event-oriented, focussing on how variation in the ecology of the area around stadia on match days and a set of counterfactual days when the stadium is not used facilitates different criminal opportunities. This is achieved primarily through the analysis of police-recorded crime data for three kilometre areas surrounding a sample of five stadia for the period 2005- 2010. The thesis focuses on three components of crime events - where they occur, when they occur, and why a disproportionate amount of it clusters in some neighbourhoods and not others. Despite the contrasting physical environment around the five stadia, the findings suggest very similar spatial and temporal crime patterns in the area surrounding stadia when they are used relative to when they are not and thus lend support to environmental theories of crime in the football context. The findings also help draw attention to where and when crime is elevated on football match days. The implications of the research for reducing the unintended and unwanted side-effect of football that is desired for the positive utilities it brings, in particular the practicality of employing situational crime prevention in the context of English domestic football are discussed.
author Kurland, J.
author_facet Kurland, J.
author_sort Kurland, J.
title The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
title_short The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
title_full The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
title_fullStr The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
title_full_unstemmed The ecology of football-related crime and disorder
title_sort ecology of football-related crime and disorder
publisher University College London (University of London)
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.644420
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