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‘No One Learned’: Interpreting a Drugs Crackdown Operation and its Consequences Through The ‘Lens’ of Social Harm

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  • Will Mason

Abstract

This article seeks to extend studies of social harm by detailing the ways that harm is interpreted, identified and reflected upon by social actors in a specific empirical context: a drugs crackdown operation in a northern English city. Using a longitudinal ethnographic approach, unique insights are reported both from the time that the operation took place and a point in time five years afterwards. The data offer rich accounts of the immediate, short- and longer-term impacts as interpreted by youth workers and a group of mostly Somali young people (aged 13–19). Social harm, it is argued, offers a useful ‘lens’ through which to critically explore the culpability of well-meaning state interventions in the (re)production of structural inequalities.

Suggested Citation

  • Will Mason, 2020. "‘No One Learned’: Interpreting a Drugs Crackdown Operation and its Consequences Through The ‘Lens’ of Social Harm," The British Journal of Criminology, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, vol. 60(2), pages 382-402.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:crimin:v:60:y:2020:i:2:p:382-402.
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1093/bjc/azz047
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