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      Chapter

      Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals
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      Chapter

      Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals

      DOI link for Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals

      Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals book

      A gendered analysis

      Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals

      DOI link for Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals

      Conceptualising safety and crime at UK music festivals book

      A gendered analysis
      ByHannah Bows, Hannah King, Fiona Measham
      BookGendered Violence at International Festivals

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2020
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 18
      eBook ISBN 9780429344893
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      ABSTRACT

      There has been a global surge in music festivals over the last decade, especially in Europe. In the UK, it is estimated that more than 3.5 million people attended the 230 music festivals in 2015 (Time Out, 2015; UK Festival Awards, 2016). Despite a body of research indicating higher levels of crime, particularly acquisitive and violent crime in spaces with similar characteristics (e.g. nightclubs, pubs and gigs), there have been no previous studies examining the occurrence or nature of crime at music festivals. This chapter brings together conceptual developments across the social sciences to shed light on the underexplored subject of gender and safety at music festivals, a leisure location of growing interest to social scientists and of significant growth within the events industry. This chapter presents data from the first UK study to explore safety and crime at music festivals and raises questions regarding the distinctive features of commercialised music festivals, the extent to which they can be considered transgressive or countercultural spaces and what might be the distinctions, if any, of gendered sexual violence within such spaces.

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