The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control
Determining the points at which group behavior moves from legitimate activity into an unruly mob and finally into a criminal riot is difficult. In addition, labeling behavior as a 'riot' can influence the course of events. Police intervention may extend and intensify a riot. Crowd behavior...
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1986
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-39432017-05-22T05:42:07Z The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control CUNNEEN, Chris FINDLAY, Mark Determining the points at which group behavior moves from legitimate activity into an unruly mob and finally into a criminal riot is difficult. In addition, labeling behavior as a 'riot' can influence the course of events. Police intervention may extend and intensify a riot. Crowd behavior and decisions regarding police responses to it reflect political and social factors. Use of the criminal justice process to control collective behavior has a long history. However, crowd control often now represents the institutionalization of confrontation between police and the working class use of public space for recreational and political purposes. The use of the criminal justice process to deal with riots is problematic because the fact criminalization focuses on individual behavior, whereas a riot represents collective behavior. Policing a riot involves crowd control, but the result of this policing is the identification of individual offenses and offenders. Thus, using the police and courts to deal with collective behavior involves basic contradictions and is often inappropriate. 1986-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/1991 info:doi/10.1177/000486588601900304 Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Riot control Civil disorders Crowd behavior Crowd control Riot patterns Mass arrest procedures Participant identification Special events policing Australia Criminal Law Social Control, Law, Crime, and Deviance |
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Riot control Civil disorders Crowd behavior Crowd control Riot patterns Mass arrest procedures Participant identification Special events policing Australia Criminal Law Social Control, Law, Crime, and Deviance CUNNEEN, Chris FINDLAY, Mark The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
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Determining the points at which group behavior moves from legitimate activity into an unruly mob and finally into a criminal riot is difficult. In addition, labeling behavior as a 'riot' can influence the course of events. Police intervention may extend and intensify a riot. Crowd behavior and decisions regarding police responses to it reflect political and social factors. Use of the criminal justice process to control collective behavior has a long history. However, crowd control often now represents the institutionalization of confrontation between police and the working class use of public space for recreational and political purposes. The use of the criminal justice process to deal with riots is problematic because the fact criminalization focuses on individual behavior, whereas a riot represents collective behavior. Policing a riot involves crowd control, but the result of this policing is the identification of individual offenses and offenders. Thus, using the police and courts to deal with collective behavior involves basic contradictions and is often inappropriate. |
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text |
author |
CUNNEEN, Chris FINDLAY, Mark |
author_facet |
CUNNEEN, Chris FINDLAY, Mark |
author_sort |
CUNNEEN, Chris |
title |
The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
title_short |
The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
title_full |
The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
title_fullStr |
The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Functions of Criminal Law in Riot Control |
title_sort |
functions of criminal law in riot control |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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1986 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/1991 |
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1772829371733639168 |