This paper focuses on the practice of youth justice (termed ‘youth protection’ in Belgium) in which professional actors ascribe deviant behaviour of youngsters to different cultural and migration backgrounds. Intra-European Roma migrants and refugees from the Northern Caucasus in Belgium are chosen as case studies. Discourse analysis of 55 youth court files and 41 expert interviews with professional actors show that deviant behaviour of these young people is explained in different manners. Two discourses are identified: ‘criminal vagabonds’ and ‘war torn children’. These discourses and their effects in practice differ tremendously for both groups. The broader discussion this article touches upon is the selective inclusion and exclusion in the institutions of formal social control, through social practices of culturalisation. |
Zoekresultaat: 4 artikelen
De zoekresultaten worden gefilterd op:Tijdschrift Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit x
Artikel |
Selectieve ‘culturalisering’ in de praktijk van de jeugdbescherming in België |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2017 |
Trefwoorden | youth justice, Roma, Caucasian migrants, refugees, selectivity, deviance |
Auteurs | dr. Olga Petintseva |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Diversen |
Lokale oplossingen voor problemen in asielopvang: de ‘vluchtelingencrisis’ als window of opportunity |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2017 |
Trefwoorden | asylum reception, local turn, Plan Einstein, experimental governance |
Auteurs | dr. Karin Geuijen, dr. Rianne Dekker en dr. Caroline Oliver |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
During the recent ‘refugee crisis’, governments have been confronted with various problems concerning asylum reception. In several locations in the Netherlands, as well as elsewhere in Europe and beyond, new local forms of experimenting around the issue of asylum reception have begun. One example is Utrecht’s ‘Plan Einstein’. In Overvecht, a district of the city, an office building has been converted into an asylum shelter, where 400 asylum seekers live together with 38 non-refugee youngsters from Utrecht. The Centre runs courses and activities, offered to both asylum seekers (including those who do not yet have a residence status) and local residents. Employing the concepts of ‘multilevel governance’ and ‘experimental governance’, this article indicates why this initiative was able to be realized at this location and at this time. |
Artikel |
Verpest in het nestEen casestudie van een criminele familie |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2012 |
Trefwoorden | family ties, fission and fusion, stigmatization, criminal family |
Auteurs | Borris van der Swaan |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article analyses a criminal family. It is not the individual, but the family as a social entity that is central to this approach. The Van D.’s are a family of eleven brothers with a collective history of crime. Raised with anti-authoritarian norms, violence, alcohol and a strong sense of loyalty, they were known as an ‘army of brothers’ dominating the streets of H-town. The criminal family as object of study proves valuable in understanding the influence of contextual factors, subculture, and stigmatization. In the case of the Van D.’s, blood ties create cohesion and conflict at the same time. |
Artikel |
Herkenbaar, overzichtelijk en geborgenEen verkenning van de maatschappelijke achtergronden van afgeschermde woondomeinen in Nederland |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 1 2012 |
Trefwoorden | enclosed residential domains, privatisation, polarisation, unsafety |
Auteurs | David Hamers en Manon van Middelkoop |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In the Netherlands the discussion on the recent increase in residential domains with some sort of enclosure is fuelled by references to foreign examples (gated communities). However, large scale gated communities are absent in the Netherlands. Rather, we speak of enclosed residential domains. This article analyses the societal forces behind their popularity. Trends facilitating the further development of enclosed residential domains appear to be stronger than those impeding it. The growing need for shelter and a living environment that is predictable and familiar is especially important. Lack of safety, however, cannot directly be regarded as a prominent factor. |