ABSTRACT

Crime and Social Change in Middle England offers a new way of looking at contemporary debates on the fear of crime. Using observation, interviews and documentary analysis it traces the reactions of citizens of one very ordinary town to events, conflicts and controversies around such topical subjects of criminological investigation as youth, public order, drugs, policing and home security in their community. In doing so it moves in place from comfortable suburbs to hard pressed inner city estates, from the affluent to the impoverished, from old people watching the town where they grew up change around them to young in-comers who are part of that change. This is a book which will give all students of crime a rare and fascinating insight into how issues at the heart of contemporary law and order politics both nationally and internationally actually play out on the ground.

chapter |20 pages

Speaking of crime

Towards a sociology of public sensibilities

chapter |25 pages

About Macclesfield

Social change and a sense of place

chapter |25 pages

The common places of crime

Crime in local talk

chapter |18 pages

Conclusions

From east Cheshire to the wider world