Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for four days. This event was not an ethnic riot: participants were ethnically diverse and did not discriminate in choosing targets for looting or destruction. Whereas the sociological literature has focused on variation in rioting across cities, we examine variation within London by mapping the residential addresses of 1,620 riotersâwho were subsequently arrested and chargedâon to 25,022 neighborhoods. Our findings challenge the orthodoxy that rioting is not explained by deprivation or by disorganization. Rioters were most likely to come from economically disadvantaged neighborhoods. Rioters also tended to come from neighborhoods where ethnic fra...
Policy Let’s get real about the ‘riots’: Exploring the relationship between deprivation and the Engl...
This paper examines the situational dynamics of the 2011 London Riots. The empirical contribution is...
The article looks at current explanations for the 2011 English riots. It critiques one dominant view...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for ...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for f...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for f...
In August 2011, over four days, rioting spread across several cities in England. Previous accounts o...
In August 2011, over four days, rioting spread across several cities in England. Previous accounts o...
Despite media and political rhetoric to the contrary, there is persuasive evidence to suggest an as...
The August 2011 riots in London prompted many commentators to look back on previous riots in the cit...
In the wake of a third night of rioting in London, Henry Overman, tries to find some explanation for...
Past attempts to explain riots have foundered on problems that are as mu conceptual as empirical. Fa...
Despite media and political rhetoric to the contrary, there is persuasive evidence to suggest an ass...
This paper argues that sociological engagement with the 2011 summer unrest in England has thus far o...
Let me start by pointing out that I am not an expert on civil unrest. But given events in London (an...
Policy Let’s get real about the ‘riots’: Exploring the relationship between deprivation and the Engl...
This paper examines the situational dynamics of the 2011 London Riots. The empirical contribution is...
The article looks at current explanations for the 2011 English riots. It critiques one dominant view...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for ...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for f...
Thousands rioted in London in August 2011, with the police losing control of parts of the city for f...
In August 2011, over four days, rioting spread across several cities in England. Previous accounts o...
In August 2011, over four days, rioting spread across several cities in England. Previous accounts o...
Despite media and political rhetoric to the contrary, there is persuasive evidence to suggest an as...
The August 2011 riots in London prompted many commentators to look back on previous riots in the cit...
In the wake of a third night of rioting in London, Henry Overman, tries to find some explanation for...
Past attempts to explain riots have foundered on problems that are as mu conceptual as empirical. Fa...
Despite media and political rhetoric to the contrary, there is persuasive evidence to suggest an ass...
This paper argues that sociological engagement with the 2011 summer unrest in England has thus far o...
Let me start by pointing out that I am not an expert on civil unrest. But given events in London (an...
Policy Let’s get real about the ‘riots’: Exploring the relationship between deprivation and the Engl...
This paper examines the situational dynamics of the 2011 London Riots. The empirical contribution is...
The article looks at current explanations for the 2011 English riots. It critiques one dominant view...