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The riots of the underclass?: stigmatisation, mediation and the government of poverty and disadvantage in neoliberal Britain

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The riots of the underclass? stigmatisation, mediation and the government of poverty and disadvantage in neoliberal Britain. / Tyler, Imogen.
In: Sociological Research Online, Vol. 18, No. 4, 6, 11.2013.

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@article{9a7ac63239f647a4ab611174181f5b39,
title = "The riots of the underclass?: stigmatisation, mediation and the government of poverty and disadvantage in neoliberal Britain",
abstract = "Five nights in August 2011 saw the largest and most pervasive scenes of civil unrest in recent British history. From the onset a consensus emerged -within political commentary, the news and online media coverage -that these were the riots of the underclass. This article explores how and why the conceptual and perceptual frame of the underclass was mobilised as a means of explaining and containing the meaning of the riots. First, it traces the longer cultural history of the underclass. It then examines how this framing of the riots -as the riots of the underclass -was used to generate and deepen public consent for the shift from protective liberal forms of welfare to penal {\textquoteleft}workfare{\textquoteright} regimes. The central claim is that if we want critically to contest neoliberal social and economic policies and the downward social mobility and deepening inequalities which these policies engender, it is necessary to challenge the ideas of the underclass that currently underpin public understandings of poverty and disadvantage. It is only then that we can begin to make another sense of the August riots as one part of a deepening neoliberal legitimation crisis.",
author = "Imogen Tyler",
year = "2013",
month = nov,
doi = "10.5153/sro.3157",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
journal = "Sociological Research Online",
issn = "1360-7804",
publisher = "Sociological Research Online",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The riots of the underclass?

T2 - stigmatisation, mediation and the government of poverty and disadvantage in neoliberal Britain

AU - Tyler, Imogen

PY - 2013/11

Y1 - 2013/11

N2 - Five nights in August 2011 saw the largest and most pervasive scenes of civil unrest in recent British history. From the onset a consensus emerged -within political commentary, the news and online media coverage -that these were the riots of the underclass. This article explores how and why the conceptual and perceptual frame of the underclass was mobilised as a means of explaining and containing the meaning of the riots. First, it traces the longer cultural history of the underclass. It then examines how this framing of the riots -as the riots of the underclass -was used to generate and deepen public consent for the shift from protective liberal forms of welfare to penal ‘workfare’ regimes. The central claim is that if we want critically to contest neoliberal social and economic policies and the downward social mobility and deepening inequalities which these policies engender, it is necessary to challenge the ideas of the underclass that currently underpin public understandings of poverty and disadvantage. It is only then that we can begin to make another sense of the August riots as one part of a deepening neoliberal legitimation crisis.

AB - Five nights in August 2011 saw the largest and most pervasive scenes of civil unrest in recent British history. From the onset a consensus emerged -within political commentary, the news and online media coverage -that these were the riots of the underclass. This article explores how and why the conceptual and perceptual frame of the underclass was mobilised as a means of explaining and containing the meaning of the riots. First, it traces the longer cultural history of the underclass. It then examines how this framing of the riots -as the riots of the underclass -was used to generate and deepen public consent for the shift from protective liberal forms of welfare to penal ‘workfare’ regimes. The central claim is that if we want critically to contest neoliberal social and economic policies and the downward social mobility and deepening inequalities which these policies engender, it is necessary to challenge the ideas of the underclass that currently underpin public understandings of poverty and disadvantage. It is only then that we can begin to make another sense of the August riots as one part of a deepening neoliberal legitimation crisis.

U2 - 10.5153/sro.3157

DO - 10.5153/sro.3157

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

JO - Sociological Research Online

JF - Sociological Research Online

SN - 1360-7804

IS - 4

M1 - 6

ER -