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Law and Order - Crime Problem, Moral Panic, or Penal Crisis? (From Law and Order and British Politics, P 38-59, 1984, Philip Norton, ed. See NCJ-96826)

NCJ Number
96828
Author(s)
K Bottomley; C Coleman
Date Published
1984
Length
22 pages
Annotation
Although overall recorded crime rates have grown considerably in Great Britain over the last 25 years, the nation is not experiencing a crisis of criminal behavior.
Abstract
The violent street crime which most concerns the public represents a small proportion of total recorded crime. Complex social processes generate and sustain public anxieties about law and order. The mass media, the police, the judiciary, politicians, and various others may play significent roles in these processes. The newspapers and television have a major influence on fear of crime. In addition, the concept of moral panic underscores the way in which attention focuses on particular issues. Furthermore, concern about law and order may indicate the anxiety and resentment resulting from social changes in British society. Moreover, the focus on the issue also reflects the apparent failure of the criminal justice system to cope with the problem or to develop a coherent penal policy. As a result, the public is more intent on treating offenders more harshly than on changing fundamental social and economic conditions. Fifty-seven references are listed.

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