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E-grāmata: Policing Nightlife: Security, Transgression and Urban Order [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(University of New South Wales, Australia)
  • Formāts: 224 pages, 4 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Studies in Crime, Security and Justice
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Apr-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781351039420
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 155,64 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 222,34 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 224 pages, 4 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Studies in Crime, Security and Justice
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Apr-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781351039420
Nightlife is a place of both real and imagined risk, a frontier (Melbin 1978) where apparent freedom and transgression are closely linked, and where regulation of leisure and collective intoxication has been diffused throughout an expanding network of state and private actors. This book explores Sydneys contemporary night-time economy as the product of an intersection of both local and global transformations, as policing comes to incorporate more and more private personnel empowered to regulate public drinking and nightlife.

Policing Nightlife focuses on the historical and social conditions, cultural meanings and regulatory controls that have shaped both public and private forms of policing and security in contemporary urban nightlife. In so doing, it reflects more broadly on global changes in the nature of contemporary policing and how aspects of neoliberalism and the ideal of the 24-hour city have shaped policing, security and night-time leisure. Based on a decade of research and interviews with both police and doorstaff working in nightlife settings, it explores the effectiveness of policies governing policing and private security in the night-time economy in the context of media, political and public debates about regulation, and the gendered and highly masculine aspects of much of this work.

An accessible and compelling read, this book will appeal to students and scholars of criminology, policing, sociology and those interested in understanding the debates surrounding security, policing and contemporary urban nightlife.
1.Introduction 2.Urban Drinking and Disreputable Leisure in Sydney 3.The
History of Policing and Nightlife 4.Regulation, Security and the Night-Time
Economy: The Sydney Study 5.Crossing the Line into the Danger Zone:
Nightlife, Crime and Policing in the News 6.Its Not Always Pretty, But
Someone Has To Do It: Private Security in Sydneys Night-Time Economy 7.The
City in Bedlam: Police Views on Sydneys Night-Time Economy 8.There and Back
Again? Drinking and the Governance of Sydney Nightlife
Dr Phillip Wadds is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at UNSW, Sydney. His research is situated at the intersection of four interrelated themes: policing; nightlife and related leisure; alcohol and other drugs; and violence. He has spent the last decade undertaking ethnographic and field-based research examining various features of nightlife in Sydney with an enduring focus on its policing and regulation.