Boris Johnson throws £3.6 Billion to fund Police officers and prison spaces- A necessary policy, or throwing fuel to the fire?
It has been all over the news that Boris Johnson has put
£3.6 Billion into the funding of 20,000 new police officers and has ‘created’
10,000 more prison spaces. ( https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-49318400).
This blog aims to critically examine the portrayal of violence with its causations and solutions through the Neo- conservative lens and its distorted realities as well as methods of Conservative retention of power through these right realist approaches concerning crime and justice.
It can be argued that this right realist approach is deeply
flawed and problematic. Firstly this policy simply is a case of exploring the
issue of a rise in violent crime as being an issue to tackle with punitive
measures. The individual is to blame entirely and rational choice is where we
must lie our societal blame. However it is apparent that structural issues and
social harms fuelled through consumer capitalism and Neoliberal social policy
is not considered here. Since the Conservatives have come to power in 2010,
there have been detrimental cutbacks which have impacted on communities. The
YMCA conducted research covered by the Guardian which highlighted that net
spending on Youth centres and services in England has dropped by £737 million
(62%) since the 2010 coalition. This has quantified to 600 youth centres closed,
3,500 youth workers out becoming unemployed and 140,000 places for young people
on youth and community projects being taken away. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jul/31/slashing-youth-services-tories-betrayed-generation-labour-legal-requirement
. To give more numbers to the debate, since the 2010 coalition, across all 43
Police Forces in England and Wales have had cutbacks of between 19,000 and
22,000 police officers. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-42977661
this new policy announced this week by
Boris Johnson, isn’t creating a surplus, is just reinstating the original status
quo.
From a critical standpoint, it can be argued that the
Conservatives use crime and justice to retain their political power. It starts
with neoliberal politics. Harvey (2005) interprets neoliberalism as a theory of
liberation whereby the values of individualism, autonomy, free markets and
trade is promoted and encouraged by the state. Thorsen and Lie (2006) argue
that this age of collective individualism, fuelled by consumer capitalism see a
rise in social capital and aspirational values, which are made unattainable for
many because of mass cutbacks and social exclusion. It can be argued that this
mass social exclusion and unattainability has led to a listening gap. (Bakkali
2018). A listening gap whereby youth groups in particular are struggling to
find a purpose and place to fit into this society of demand, competition, individualism
and raised aspirations. This is where we see a rise in ‘boredom’ and antisocial
behaviour on the streets. You will often find that the blame and accountability
is being placed on the hands of agencies such as schools and the NHS. This
article from April 2019 demonstrates this appointment of responsibility. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47768631.
The article reports on the Governments approach to hold ‘schools
and NHS accountable’ for youth and violent crime. At this stage the public are
now looking at a society which is plagued with street violence, gang warfare
and ‘bored’ teenagers looting shops. What they want is a call for harsher sentences
and a punitive approaches which of course is something that the Conservatives
can provide, as we have seen earlier this week when Boris Johnson made the announcement
that he was funding 10,000 new prison places and 20,000 police officers. Arguably
due to media representation of violence and moral panics, this is what the
public want to hear and as a result, on the model of crime and justice, the Conservatives
seem to be the party to vote for and this is how power is restored, despite the
fact that it was their policies which arguably have left this rise in violent crime.
Zizek (2008) interprets physical violence we see on the
streets and in the domestic sphere as being generated by the systematic violence
that sustains our political and economic systems. This argument can be tied
into the theory that violence is a potent symbol of the structural and societal
issues which have fuelled this rise in violent crime. Zizek (2008) also argues
that the emergence of the ‘beasts’ lurking in our bourgeois, civilised society
as being the products of consumer capitalism. Treadwell (2012) argues that the
capitalist culture has absorbed the working classes into a state of drive,
desire to access the socio-symbolic life of consumer culture and this has led
to a rise in a narcissistic, competitive, individualised subjectivity which is
a reflection of post political capitalist realism. By drawing from these
narratives, it is arguably clear that the rise in violent crime which according
to the Conservatives is requiring the implementation of 10,000 more prison
places and 20,000 ‘new’ police officers isn’t as apparent. The deeply rooted structural
and political issues which have has left groups unable to fit into the jigsaw puzzle
of normative and mainstream society have been left displaced and left behind on
the platform of consumer capitalism. It is clear through the empirical works of
Zizek that violence is more symbolic. Until money is thrown at addressing these
issues, I struggle to see a future whereby violent crime can be reduced or ‘solved’.
References:
References:
- BBC News (July 2019)- Recruitment of 20,000 new police officers to begin within weeks, Date accessed: 17th August 2019. URL available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-49123319
- Bakkali Y (2018) life on road: symbolic struggle and the munpain, University of Sussex, Sussex.
- Coughlan S (2019) Schools and NHS could be held accountable over Youth Crime, available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47768631, date accessed: 17th August 2019.
Hall - Harvey D (2005) - A brief history of Neoliberalism, Oxford University Press, Oxford
- Thorsen E.D and Lie A (2006) ‘What is Neoliberalism, Research Gate. Vol 1, p1.
- Treadwell J, Hall S, Winlow S (2012), shopocalypse now: consumer culture and the English Riots of 2011, British Journal of Criminology vol 1.
- Smith C (2018), by slashing youth services, the Tories have betrayed a generation, Available at https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jul/31/slashing-youth-services-tories-betrayedgeneration-labour-legal-requirement date accessed: 17th August 2019.
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