Two dominant themes can be identified in political and media debates which followed various incidents of urban unrest in Britain during the 1980s. Events in St. Pauls, Bristol, in April 1980, in Toxteth, Liverpool in July 1981, and in the Handsworth district of Birmingham in October 1985, were amongst those which were frequently held to represent a new and troubling development in British cities. In the report which followed his Inquiry into the disturbances in Brixton in April 1981, Lord Scarman recorded the 'horror and incredulity' with which the British public watched violent scenes unfold on television news reports (Scarman, 1981; 1.2). Accompanying the view that urban unrest was anathema in British society was the frequent suggestio...
This work discusses how questions of race, class, immigration and nationality have changed since 194...
The 2011 riots have already been the most commented upon riots of recent decades. Casting some doubt...
By the late 1970s, the nation’s first generation of British-born black people (especially of West In...
This powerful and original book locates the anti-police violence that spread across England in 1980-...
When violence erupted on the streets of England in 1981, it undoubtedly shocked the country in its s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
This thesis examines how the structuring of black (Afro-Caribbean) British identity led to the 1981 ...
"Race, Englishness and the Media is an examination of racialised depictions of the urban riots whic...
From April 10 to 12, 1981, about 1,000 Londoners, mainly black youth, fought the police in the Brixt...
This study addresses violent urban disturbances which occurred in England in the early 1980s with pa...
Past attempts to explain riots have foundered on problems that are as mu conceptual as empirical. Fa...
This thesis represents an account of the experience of race in contemporary Britain. It adopts a ‘mi...
The 2011 riots have already been the most commented upon riots of recent decades. Casting some doubt...
The summer of 1976 is an under-cited moment of significance in the history of race and immigration i...
This thesis examines the collective violence throughout England in 1980-81; these were largely spont...
This work discusses how questions of race, class, immigration and nationality have changed since 194...
The 2011 riots have already been the most commented upon riots of recent decades. Casting some doubt...
By the late 1970s, the nation’s first generation of British-born black people (especially of West In...
This powerful and original book locates the anti-police violence that spread across England in 1980-...
When violence erupted on the streets of England in 1981, it undoubtedly shocked the country in its s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
This thesis examines how the structuring of black (Afro-Caribbean) British identity led to the 1981 ...
"Race, Englishness and the Media is an examination of racialised depictions of the urban riots whic...
From April 10 to 12, 1981, about 1,000 Londoners, mainly black youth, fought the police in the Brixt...
This study addresses violent urban disturbances which occurred in England in the early 1980s with pa...
Past attempts to explain riots have foundered on problems that are as mu conceptual as empirical. Fa...
This thesis represents an account of the experience of race in contemporary Britain. It adopts a ‘mi...
The 2011 riots have already been the most commented upon riots of recent decades. Casting some doubt...
The summer of 1976 is an under-cited moment of significance in the history of race and immigration i...
This thesis examines the collective violence throughout England in 1980-81; these were largely spont...
This work discusses how questions of race, class, immigration and nationality have changed since 194...
The 2011 riots have already been the most commented upon riots of recent decades. Casting some doubt...
By the late 1970s, the nation’s first generation of British-born black people (especially of West In...