The Spatial Dimensions of Identity Development for Black, Urban Youth/ Between Love, Rights and Solidarity

Conference presentation


Miller, E. (2018). The Spatial Dimensions of Identity Development for Black, Urban Youth/ Between Love, Rights and Solidarity. Research in Progress Seminar Series (QUB). Belfast, Northern Ireland
AuthorsMiller, E.
TypeConference presentation
Abstract

Since the late 1990s, urban regions have been at the centre of contemporary law and order debates decrying deviance among black urban youth. These debates have been particularly concerned with the risk of black, urban youths’ appropriation into a culture of gang violence. Corresponding, state curtailment efforts have been informed by the institutional determination that the urban gang youth belongs to a violent minority of serious offenders, for whom penal administrators reserve their most punitive sanctions. Guided by field research conducted in London, England and Toronto, Canada, this presentation investigates how institutional management of deviance, in the urban, contributes to thwarting (and suggests how it might foster) the identity development of black, urban youth.

Year2018
Publication dates
Print21 Nov 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited13 Dec 2018
Accepted21 Nov 2018
Supplemental file
License
Permalink -

https://openresearch.lsbu.ac.uk/item/86899

Download files

  • 104
    total views
  • 36
    total downloads
  • 2
    views this month
  • 1
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Evaluation of the Kent Serious Youth Violence Project
Havard, T., Magill. C., Flood, C., Harvey, D., Shepherd, B., Miller, E. and Whittaker, A. (2023). Evaluation of the Kent Serious Youth Violence Project.
‘The Alchemy of Race and Rights’: The Logic of Historicizing Contempo-rary Narratives on Race, Youth and Gangs
Miller, E. (2023). ‘The Alchemy of Race and Rights’: The Logic of Historicizing Contempo-rary Narratives on Race, Youth and Gangs. in: The Palgrave Handbook of UK Gangs Palgrave Macmillan.
Stigma, Penalty and Black British Young Women: Historicizing Child Q
Miller, E. (2022). Stigma, Penalty and Black British Young Women: Historicizing Child Q. London South Bank University.
Le défi des gangs de jeunes : enjeux et interventions dans le contexte britannique et canadien
Miller, E. and Whittaker, A. (2022). Le défi des gangs de jeunes : enjeux et interventions dans le contexte britannique et canadien. Montreal, Canada University of Montréal Press.
Race, Recognition and Retribution in Contemporary Youth Justice: The Intractability Malleability Thesis (Routledge Critical Studies in Crime, Diversity and Criminal Justice)
Miller, E. (2021). Race, Recognition and Retribution in Contemporary Youth Justice: The Intractability Malleability Thesis (Routledge Critical Studies in Crime, Diversity and Criminal Justice). London Routledge.
Moving Beyond Crime and Punishment Narratives and Analyses: Critical Race Theory and Racial Specificity in Youth Justice.
Miller, E (2020). Moving Beyond Crime and Punishment Narratives and Analyses: Critical Race Theory and Racial Specificity in Youth Justice. British Society of Criminology Newsletters. 85.
Exploring the Lammy review — Locating racial discrimination among the key concerns of contemporary youth justice
Miller, E. (2018). Exploring the Lammy review — Locating racial discrimination among the key concerns of contemporary youth justice. 18th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology. Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina 29 Aug - 01 Sep 2018
Rebranding surveillance as social justice — Toronto’s School Resource Officer Program
Miller, E. (2017). Rebranding surveillance as social justice — Toronto’s School Resource Officer Program. 17th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology. Cardiff, Wales 13 - 16 Sep 2017
Change, Media and Moral Panic in Contemporary Youth Justice
Miller, E. (2016). Change, Media and Moral Panic in Contemporary Youth Justice. Annual Post Graduate Conference (QUB). Belfast Northern Ireland 2016