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eleven - Responding to structural and symbolic violence: a comparative case study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2022

Mike Seal
Affiliation:
Newman University, Birmingham
Pete Harris
Affiliation:
Newman University, Birmingham
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Summary

Case Study 1: exemplifying structural and symbolic violence: Islington, London

“I’m used to the struggle

Used to seeing youths leave school just to hustle

Hitting up a few moves

Getting gassed and go hard with the food

Until they’re facing a cell like Majin Buu

But ain't really got a choice when you can't afford creps, G

When your fridge and your belly stay empty

This will make a man squeeze until it's empty

Take a man's Ps if he stunts and try tempt me

’Cos it's the same everyday

Another soul lost I felt them cold chills

Ain't got to say it u feel it so real

Cold meals sitting in a cell

Roads don't wish a nigga well

This one's for my easy ones

Everybody hustling to see the funds

Young mum hustling to feed her son

Everybody hustling to beat the crunch”

(Extract from a young man's rap)

The London borough of Islington in many ways embodies a polarised disparity between rich and poor. Close to central London, booming property prices have brought huge windfall affluence to many of Islington's residents, many of whom are working in the new knowledge economy of the technology or finance sectors. Others have been left behind, unable to get on the property ladder, or entirely socially excluded, unemployed or functioning within a growing black economy. With the decline of traditional blue-collar industry, local working-class communities within the borough have become pockets of deprivation, with diminishing levels of social capital and rising levels of crime and violence.

The young people we met on these estates in Islington (such as the young man who produced the rap above) were at the sharp end of these macro-level processes. Young people were being drawn into violence, some as victims, as this worker explains:

“I’m thinking of a young person who first came on the radar, under the umbrella – victim, he was set upon by12-15 boys outside school. When we were engaging with him, he was always under that umbrella of victim. His family background, his mum, quite God-fearing, tried hard by him, he had good support network within the family, sisters all very concerned about his welfare.

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Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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