Journal article 1307 views 384 downloads
Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate
Race & Class, Volume: 54, Issue: 4, Pages: 5 - 21
Swansea University Author: Jon Burnett
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/0306396813475981
Abstract
Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a changing geography of racial violence (in terms of new areas and targets), and sets this in the context of the socially destructive impact of neoliberalism as well as government policies to manage th...
Published in: | Race & Class |
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ISSN: | 0306-3968 1741-3125 |
Published: |
London
Sage Publications
2013
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa33864 |
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2017-07-26T17:00:50.6076691 v2 33864 2017-05-22 Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate 3c4e0496f3701567ac4a28536ff237f9 0000-0002-9229-897X Jon Burnett Jon Burnett true false 2017-05-22 SOSS Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a changing geography of racial violence (in terms of new areas and targets), and sets this in the context of the socially destructive impact of neoliberalism as well as government policies to manage the UK’s changing demographic make-up. With racial violence officially defined as a form of ‘hate crime’, it is divorced from any wider political context or racialised climate and reduced to a matter of individual pathology. The changing parameters of racism and the state’s responses present a challenge which the Left and anti-racists have been slow to meet. Journal Article Race & Class 54 4 5 21 Sage Publications London 0306-3968 1741-3125 asylum seekers, crime partnership, hate crime, Islamophobia, Macpherson Report, migrant workers, neoliberalism, night-time economy, Peterborough, Plymouth, racial violence, Stoke-on-Trent 28 3 2013 2013-03-28 10.1177/0306396813475981 COLLEGE NANME Social Sciences School COLLEGE CODE SOSS Swansea University 2017-07-26T17:00:50.6076691 2017-05-22T18:41:07.9890043 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law Jon Burnett 0000-0002-9229-897X 1 0033864-31052017153936.pdf racialviolencepolticshate.pdf 2017-05-31T15:39:36.6130000 Output 399791 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2017-05-31T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate |
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Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate Jon Burnett |
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Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate |
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Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate |
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Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate |
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Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a changing geography of racial violence (in terms of new areas and targets), and sets this in the context of the socially destructive impact of neoliberalism as well as government policies to manage the UK’s changing demographic make-up. With racial violence officially defined as a form of ‘hate crime’, it is divorced from any wider political context or racialised climate and reduced to a matter of individual pathology. The changing parameters of racism and the state’s responses present a challenge which the Left and anti-racists have been slow to meet. |
published_date |
2013-03-28T19:08:45Z |
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11.04748 |