Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime

This thesis explores the social meanings applied to the carrying and use of knives as a weapon, by young people living in areas with high rates of knife crime and violence. The thesis situates data, generated through interviews and focus groups, within a theoretical framework based around the concep...

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Main Author: Traynor, Peter Robert
Other Authors: Crawford, Adam ; Lister, Stuart
Published: University of Leeds 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.707054
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7070542018-07-24T03:16:43ZClosing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crimeTraynor, Peter RobertCrawford, Adam ; Lister, Stuart2016This thesis explores the social meanings applied to the carrying and use of knives as a weapon, by young people living in areas with high rates of knife crime and violence. The thesis situates data, generated through interviews and focus groups, within a theoretical framework based around the concept of ‘street life’, as a place in which young people, often in groups, draw on street codes as a response to the extant violence and a ‘security gap’ in their neighbourhoods. This ‘gap’ was experienced to a greater or lesser extent by most of the young people who took part in the research, and was bound up in ongoing ‘integrational difficulties’ experienced in adolescence, and exacerbated by experiences of deprivation and marginality. Some participants responded to violence by adhering to a street code that exposed them to violence, and, reproduced the violence they sought to confront. Non-offending young people were able to draw on a ‘civic code’ as a means of sustaining collective resilience. Social integration is shown to provide a crucial form of resilience for participants. In the absence of sources of collective resilience, the knife represented for many participants a proxy form of resilience. Participants were sometimes able to cultivate more effective forms of integration and social resilience as they disengaged with ‘street life’ and, as a consequence, the knife as a source of protection became increasingly redundant. In this sense, the thesis is about how young people create and sustain identities, integration and resilience in difficult circumstances, and the sometimes-misguided ways in which they seek to do this. Thus, the thesis adds novel empirical and conceptual findings to normative and subcultural understandings, not just of knife carrying but of gangs, and other collective responses to violence.364.15University of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.707054http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/16687/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 364.15
spellingShingle 364.15
Traynor, Peter Robert
Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
description This thesis explores the social meanings applied to the carrying and use of knives as a weapon, by young people living in areas with high rates of knife crime and violence. The thesis situates data, generated through interviews and focus groups, within a theoretical framework based around the concept of ‘street life’, as a place in which young people, often in groups, draw on street codes as a response to the extant violence and a ‘security gap’ in their neighbourhoods. This ‘gap’ was experienced to a greater or lesser extent by most of the young people who took part in the research, and was bound up in ongoing ‘integrational difficulties’ experienced in adolescence, and exacerbated by experiences of deprivation and marginality. Some participants responded to violence by adhering to a street code that exposed them to violence, and, reproduced the violence they sought to confront. Non-offending young people were able to draw on a ‘civic code’ as a means of sustaining collective resilience. Social integration is shown to provide a crucial form of resilience for participants. In the absence of sources of collective resilience, the knife represented for many participants a proxy form of resilience. Participants were sometimes able to cultivate more effective forms of integration and social resilience as they disengaged with ‘street life’ and, as a consequence, the knife as a source of protection became increasingly redundant. In this sense, the thesis is about how young people create and sustain identities, integration and resilience in difficult circumstances, and the sometimes-misguided ways in which they seek to do this. Thus, the thesis adds novel empirical and conceptual findings to normative and subcultural understandings, not just of knife carrying but of gangs, and other collective responses to violence.
author2 Crawford, Adam ; Lister, Stuart
author_facet Crawford, Adam ; Lister, Stuart
Traynor, Peter Robert
author Traynor, Peter Robert
author_sort Traynor, Peter Robert
title Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
title_short Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
title_full Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
title_fullStr Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
title_full_unstemmed Closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
title_sort closing the 'security gap' : young people, 'street life' and knife crime
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.707054
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