An ethnography of crime in Belfast

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Journal articleDate:
1996Citation:
Brewer, John; Lockhart, William H. and Rodgers Paula. 'An ethnography of crime in Belfast' - Dublin: Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland,Vol. XXVII, 1995/1996, pp177-208Download Item:
Abstract:
In an earlier paper to the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland in Dublin,
we provided a statistical comparison of trends in indictable crime in both parts of
Ireland between 1945 and 1993 set against other survey data on crime, trends in
specific offences and geographical variations in crime trends. This drew on data
from our larger research project on crime in Ireland since the Second World War. In
this paper we intend to report on the ethnographic research conducted as part of the
same project. The rationale behind the ethnographic study of crime in two police
sub-divisions of Belfast was to use the benefits of the ethnographic method to
supplement the quantitative approach to crime trends. The data are drawn from two
closely matched police sub-divisions in Belfast, Castlereagh in East Belfast and
Woodburn in the West of the city, the former largely Protestant and the latter largely
Catholic, reproducing the city?s communal spatial divide. Each sub-division also
comprises a mix of inner city deprivation and suburban splendour. Fieldwork was
conducted over a twelve-month period between 1994 and 1995. The paramilitary
ceasefire was called four months into fieldwork.
Description:
Read before the Society, 14 March 1996Publisher:
Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of IrelandType of material:
Journal articleCollections
Series/Report no:
Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of IrelandVol. XXVII 1995/1996
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Ethnography, Belfast communitiesISSN:
00814776Metadata
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