ABSTRACT

Throughout the 1970s the Home Office, the Department of the Environment and local police authorities in areas across Britain sought to control fans’ behaviour through a variety of institutional, environmental and legal measures. While the present chapter focuses on the creation of spectating environments that aimed at restricting violence, Chapters 4 and 5 evaluate the multiple policing and juridical changes ushered in by the state. Together the three chapters reconstruct the integrated approach the state and British police advocated to discipline the growing number of unruly spectators. In many ways, these policies reflected the discursive construction of unruly spectators that challenged the sporting mythology of British nationalism. The creation of football ‘hooligans’ as animalistic and brutish allowed severe and violent physical measures to be taken against spectators without significant public outcry. As I argue in this chapter, governmental authorities developed architectural policies of dividing physical space and restricting spectators’ movement that created stadium environments which invited instability and threatened rulebreakers with increasingly violent outcomes.