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Journal Article

Citation

Pospěch P. Sociol. Compass 2021; 15(3): e12857.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/soc4.12857

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Over the past 30 years, we have been witnessing a rise in incivility policing across western but also non-western cities. The term "incivility policing" refers to bans and exclusion aimed at drinking alcohol, begging, loitering, sitting in public, and many other kinds of subcriminal conduct. Scholars have observed an increasing readiness to demand legal "solutions" aimed against these kinds of conduct. In this paper, I review two major strands of scholarship dealing with the origins of these calls: First, a rising punitiveness and a "law and order" mentality, inspired by the Broken windows theory and Zero tolerance policies. Second, privatization of space and the rising influence of private actors over public spaces are discussed with references to the concepts of neoliberalism, revanchism, and the right to the city. The effect of incivility policing on vulnerable groups is examined using the example of homeless people in public space. In the final part, I suggest new factors which could help us understand the rise in incivility policing: These include general trust, everyday trust, and the imaginaries of community.


Language: en

Keywords

broken windows; city; incivility; policing; privatization; public space; trust

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