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Journal Article

Citation

Roberts CH, Innes M. Criminol. Crim. Justice 2009; 9(3): 337-357.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1748895809336383

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Informed by qualitative data from a study of formal and informal social control responses to gun crime in Lambeth, South London, this article seeks to map the contours of some of the key aspects of the policing of firearms offending in England and Wales. It is proposed that policing responses can be distinguished between a 'preventative' disposition in areas where gun-related offending is rare, and a pragmatic 'manage and suppress' reaction that is implemented in the small number of areas of the country where gun crime is comparatively more common. Focusing in particular upon the work of Operation Trident in London, the discussion seeks to identify some of the complex social forces at work within communities where gun violence is comparatively prevalent and how police seek to engage with such situations. This focus is utilized to construct an argument about a broader and deeper nascent trend in British policing that is exemplified by the response to gun crime. It is suggested that key components of the police function are increasingly being cast as requiring specialist expertise and skills if they are to be performed effectively. As such, the internal social organization of policing is coming to be organized around an increasingly complex architecture and division of labour.

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