Zero-Tolerance in Catalonia: Policing the Other in Public Space

Recent studies have argued for more nuanced understandings of zero tolerance (ZT) policing, rendering it essential to analyze the significance and actual workings of the policies in practice, including the context in which they are introduced. This article aims to accomplish this through a compariso...

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Veröffentlicht in:Critical criminology (Richmond, B.C.) B.C.), 2021-12, Vol.29 (4), p.837-852
Hauptverfasser: Lundsteen, Martin, Fernández González, Miquel
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description Recent studies have argued for more nuanced understandings of zero tolerance (ZT) policing, rendering it essential to analyze the significance and actual workings of the policies in practice, including the context in which they are introduced. This article aims to accomplish this through a comparison of two case studies in Catalonia: one in the neighborhood of Raval in Barcelona and one in Salt—a municipality in the comarca (or county) of Girona. We identify a transformation in the use of ZT policies in Catalonia and a contradiction between their social effects and proclaimed objectives. This article attempts to address how specific sociocultural groups gain power and privilege from these policies. The main argument is that a set of commonsensical ideas have become hegemonic, which allows and naturalizes certain sociocultural practices in urban space, while persecuting others, fundamentally pitting two categories against each other: the desired civil citizen and the undesirable and uncivil stranger.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Authoritarianism
Case studies
Crime
Criminology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Ethnography
Hegemony
Law and Criminolgy
Law enforcement
Neighborhoods
Police
Populism
Public spaces
Sociocultural factors
Sociology
Tolerance
Zero tolerance
title Zero-Tolerance in Catalonia: Policing the Other in Public Space
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