1 / 14

Reflecting on the August 2011 disturbances in Hackney

Reflecting on the August 2011 disturbances in Hackney. COMMUNITY PERSPECTIVES. Paul Harvey – Ipsos MORI 14 November 2011. WHO WAS CONSULTED?. Over 2,000 residents and workers from across Hackney Male and female participation Age ranges 5 through to 95

faolan
Télécharger la présentation

Reflecting on the August 2011 disturbances in Hackney

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reflecting on the August 2011 disturbances in Hackney COMMUNITY PERSPECTIVES Paul Harvey – Ipsos MORI 14 November 2011

  2. WHO WAS CONSULTED? • Over 2,000 residents and workers from across Hackney Male and female participation • Age ranges 5 through to 95 • A wide range of people reflecting the diverseHackney population were consulted, including; • range of socio-economic backgrounds • range of ethnic backgrounds [BUT not representative of views of ‘all in Hackney’] • Research and engagement took place in a range of locations; • community centres, arts venues, in-street, local barber shops, TV studios • Utilising a range of approaches, including; • discussion groups, exploratory art, TV/web debates , Vox pops, workshops, forum theatre • Fieldwork took place in October 2011

  3. HOW DO THOSE CONSULTED DESCRIBE THE KEY CAUSES AND UNDERLYING REASONS FOR THE DISTURBANCES IN HACKNEY?

  4. THEY DESCRIBE MUCH ANGER AND FRUSTRATION AMONGST CERTAIN SECTIONS OF THE COMMUNITY • GROWING FRUSTRATION • Growing divide between the richand poor, have’s and have not’s • Rising rents in Hackney • Rising unemployment • No EMA grant • Despair about the future • Closing down youth clubs • A sense of nothing for young people to do => helplessness • Lack of positive role models for many young people • ANGER • Government cuts • Lack of benefit from Olympic regeneration • Police treatment of young blackmen • Police behaviour and attitude towards the community in general • Nobody accountable anymore • => Politicians and bankers all ‘on the take’ • Government not listening to us=> protests falling on deaf ears(e.g. student protests)

  5. HOW THOSE CONSULTED DESCRIBE THEMSELVES AND OTHERS IN HACKNEY Disengaged Marginalised Disenfranchised Disconnected Poor Oppressed Victimised Frustrated Bullied Divided (socially) These feelings formed a volatile mix and the disturbances were felt to be an outlet for a broad range of emotions

  6. FOR ONE DAY – THIS ALL CHANGED • Instead of being divided – people became united • Against the police, against oppression and poverty • People were no longer victims but in control • They were no longer marginalised and in the minority • they outnumbered the police • They were no longer disengaged – they took direct action

  7. CONCERNS WITH THE WAY PEOPLE ARE HARD-WIRED TO DEAL WITH THEIR FRUSTRATION AND ANGER • There was a great deal of discussion around parenting and morals/values, with many feeling that poor parenting has contributed to some significant issues. They describe many people having; • poor communication skills • lack of basic social skills • lack of discipline • problems with anger management • This lack of discipline and ability to communicate and express themselves in a positive and constructive manner was felt by many to be a key catalyst for the violence that erupted in August.

  8. SETTING THE SCENE FOR EVENTS OF 8TH AUGUST • There was a sense that frustration has been building for a long time over a wide range of issues; • the majority of these issues are felt to result in a lack of control and hope for many, particularly the young and those from poorer sections of the community • This growing frustration, combined with feelings of anger directed at the authorities and the police in particular were seen as the foundation for the disturbances in Hackney. Those consulted feel things were then ‘sparked’ as a result of two main issues; • reaction to the Mark Duggan incident (lack of police accountability); and • the resulting disturbances in Tottenham (including video footage of a 16 year old girl being assaulted by police) and neighbouring areas

  9. POOR RELATIONS BETWEEN THE POLICE AND THE COMMUNITY WERE FELT TO BE CRUCIAL FACTORS • Conversation about the police and the way they behave towards the local community – especially perceived abuse of stop and search powers on young black men – dominated conversations, stressing; • The result is a lack of trust and respect and a growing animosity between the police and certain sections of the community WHAT THE POLICE DO - abuse their powers - stereotype young people - “harass” young black people through stop & search - take a harder line in the way they treat people from poor, BME and homeless backgrounds WHAT THE POLICE DON’T DO - show any respect to people - protect the ‘local’ community - police poor areas in the same way they do the richer areas (felt to be much slower to respond) - “communicate” effectively with people, especially young people

  10. THOUGHTS ON THE ROLE OF MARK DUGGAN’S DEATH IN THE EVENTS IN HACKNEY • The killing of Mark Duggan was widely cited as the ‘spark’ – but not the event itself. Conversation here addressed what the Mark Duggan case means to people in Hackney; • a sense that it is another example of a young black man being victimised • another example of the police ‘getting away with it’ • more of the police ‘telling lies’ e.g. about Mark Duggan firing at them first • a complete disrespect shown to his family, no communication => many people in Haringey and Hackney in particular really identified with the way his family must have felt • feeling that the key to the disturbances flaring up in Tottenham in the first place was more the assault of a 16 year old girl during the peaceful protest => this went viral on the internet and for many was the key initial ‘spark’ These events were a ‘trigger’ but people were keen to stress that there are many deep underlying reasons to explain the Hackney disturbances

  11. THE ROLE OF GANGS? => NOT ‘GANG CULTURE’ BUT A ‘GANG MENTALITY’ • People described the police and the rioters acting as two ‘gangs’ against each other • There was an overwhelming sense of people coming together ‘as one’ to cause disturbances => ‘unusually’ they walked side-by-side with ‘postcode wars’ put on hold. • Became a much larger gang than the police ‘gang’ “a number of gangs had drawn together to fight a common enemy, the Police”

  12. WHO DO THOSE CONSULTED FEEL WERE INVOLVED IN THE DISTURBANCES?

  13. THE WHOLE COMMUNITY? The ‘narrative’ and recollections of the disturbances tended to include allsections of the community THOSE WHO WERE ACTIVELY INVOLVED • those engaging in violent acts (throwing missiles, arson, vandalism) • those stealing and looting • people trying to stop the disturbances • business owners/workers protecting their premises AND THOSE WHO WERE PASSIVELY INVOLVED • people milling around and watchingbut not doing anything ‘wrong’ • residents watching from a ‘safe distance’ • people passing through the area IMPORTANT TO BE CLEAR WHAT WE MEAN BY ‘INVOLVED’

  14. DIFFICULT TO PIN THE BLAME ON PARTICULAR ‘GROUPS’ OF PEOPLE BUT - Those involved in causing trouble can be categorised; • people who are frustrated and angry at the police and authorities for a number of reasons => those more focussed on attacking property and the police, an opportunity to vent their anger • people who feel society disrespects and disadvantages them => those taking a role in all aspects of the disturbances, an opportunity to regain some ‘power’ and ‘control’ • people taking advantage of the lawlessness, being opportunistic => those more likely to be engaging in stealing and looting, an opportunity to run amok and join in

More Related