149 research outputs found
Policing the Olympic gang: the rise and fall of the Portuguese mafia
Against a backdrop of rising youth violence in the UK, the issue of gang policing has once more risen to prominence. Intense debates surrounding police cuts have led to renewed calls for a ‘war on gangs’, echoing earlier responses to England’s summer of violent disorder in 2011. Drawing on a long-term ethnographic study of policing in the London Borough of Newham, this paper reports on a case-study of gang policing during a similarly fraught political moment. In the run-up to the 2012 London Olympics, a street-based group of minority ethnic youth – the so-called Portuguese Mafia (PGM) – became the primary focus for gang policing in the Borough. Though the group did not self-identify as a gang, their activities were inflated and became the subject of a targeted enforcement initiative. These distortions, we argue, resulted from the influence of political decision-making on the working practices of front-line police officers, amplified in a climate of austerity. Through the reconstruction of this ‘natural history’, we seek to contribute an empirical account of the ambiguities inherent in police definitions of gangs, and the discriminatory consequences of categorisation. Theoretically, the paper seeks to contribute a critical sociological account of gangs and gang policing that bridges extant objectivist and constructivist readings of gangs through engagement with the Bourdieusian concept of ‘field’
Community Experiences of Serious Organised Crime in Scotland
This summary sets out key findings from a research project that aimed to explore the community experiences of serious organised crime ( SOC) in Scotland. The study sought to answer the following questions: 1) What are the relationships that exist between SOC and communities in Scotland? 2) What are the experiences and perceptions of residents, stakeholders and organisations of the scope and nature of SOC within their local area? and 3) How does SOC impact on community wellbeing, and to what extent can the harms associated with SOC be mitigated? The work involved in-depth qualitative research, to understand both direct and indirect forms of harm. Key points pertaining to the research and its results are as follows: - The study involved the selection of three community case study sites based on a typology of ' SOC-affected' communities. These sites were based in varying urban and semi-urban settings. - The impact of SOC at a more 'diffuse' national level was explored via research in a range of smaller case study sites and via interviews with national stakeholders. This included a consideration of SOC impacts in rural and remote areas, and on populations that were not concentrated in any defined geographic community. - The case study areas were selected on the basis of pre-existing academic and policy literature, an initial set of interviews with key experts, and on the basis of aggregated and anonymised intelligence summaries provided by Police Scotland. - 188 individuals participated in the study, which mostly involved semi-structured qualitative interviews, but also a small number of focus groups, unstructured interviews and observational research. Interviews were conducted with residents, local businesses, service providers, community groups, and national organisations, as well as with a small number of individuals with lived experience of SOC. - Interviews comprised of questions about: the relationship between SOC and communities; the experiences and perceptions of residents and local service providers as to the nature and extent of SOC; and the impact of SOC on community wellbeing. - Preliminary findings were presented back to a sub-sample of 33 community residents and representatives, across three of the case study areas, through a feedback method called 'co-inquiry'. This involved the organisation of events designed to assess the integrity of the findings, and elicit reflections on the implications of the findings for potential actions
Selective Radionuclide Localisation in Primary Liver Tumours
The therapeutic potential of 131I-Lipiodol was investigated in 8 patients with cholangiocarcinoma (CCA)
and 15 patients with hepatocellullar carcinoma (HCC). Patients received one or two doses of
131I-Lipiodol via hepatic arterial injection. The mean total administered activity was 668 (SD 325) MBq
in CCA and 953 (SD 477) MBq in HCC. One patient with CCA retained 131I-Lipiodol. The cumulative
radiation dose was 9.6 Gy to tumour, 6.4 Gy to liver and 1.5 Gy to lung. The patient remained
asymptomatic with no evidence of tumour 30 months from the start of treatment, whereas the remaining
7 patients exhibited tumour progression. The mean survival in CCA was 11.6 (SD 14.5) months. All 15
patients with HCC retained 131I with tumour: liver ratios of up to 30:1. The mean cumulative radiation
dose was 34.7 (SD 32.4) Gy to tumour, 3.3 (SD 1.5) Gy to liver and 4.4 (SD 2.3) Gy to lung. The mean
dose per administered activity was 3.8 (SD 4.1) cGy/MBq. Partial response (reduction in tumour size >
50%) was observed in 6 patients (40%). The mean survival was 7.1 (SD 6.0) months
Development of an antimicrobial susceptibility surveillance system for Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Malawi: comparison of methods.
Susceptibility of Neisseria gonorrhoeae to gentamicin, the primary treatment for gonorrhea in Malawi since 1993, was determined by using agar dilution MICs, E-test MICs, disc diffusion, and clinical cure rate. Agar dilution MICs were slightly higher in 1996 than in 1993 isolates, with a concomitant drop in the clinical cure rate. E-test MICs were substantially lower than agar dilution determinations, with only 77.4% within 1 log2 concentration
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Diamonds, gold and crime displacement: Hatton Garden, and the evolution of organised crime in the UK
The 2015 Hatton Garden Heist was described as the ‘largest burglary in English legal history’. However, the global attention that this spectacular crime attracted to ‘The Garden’ tended to concentrate upon the value of the stolen goods and the vintage of the burglars. What has been ignored is how the burglary shone a spotlight into Hatton Garden itself, as an area with a unique ‘upperworld’ commercial profile and skills cluster that we identify as an incubator and facilitator for organised crime. The Garden is the UK’s foremost jewellery production and retail centre and this paper seeks to explore how Hatton Garden’s businesses integrated with a fluid criminal population to transition, through hosting lucrative (and bureaucratically complex) VAT gold frauds from 1980 to the early 1990s, to become a major base for sophisticated acquisitive criminal activities. Based on extensive interviews over a thirty year period, evidence from a personal research archive and public records, this paper details a cultural community with a unique criminal profile due to the particularities of its geographical location, ethnic composition, trading culture, skills base and international connections. The processes and structures that facilitate criminal markets are largely under-researched (Antonopoulos et al. 2015: 11), and this paper considers how elements of Hatton Garden’s ‘upperworld’ businesses integrated with project criminals, displaced by policing strategies, to effect this transition
Britain: racial violence and the politics of hate
Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a changing geography of racial violence (in terms of new areas and targets), and sets this in the context of the socially destructive impact of neoliberalism as well as government policies to manage the UK’s changing demographic make-up. With racial violence officially defined as a form of ‘hate crime’, it is divorced from any wider political context or racialised climate and reduced to a matter of individual pathology. The changing parameters of racism and the state’s responses present a challenge which the Left and anti-racists have been slow to meet
Plagioclase preferred orientation in layered mylonites : evaluation of flow laws for the lower crust
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2008We evaluate the applicability of plagioclase and gabbro flow laws by comparing
predicted and observed deformation mechanisms in gabbroic shear zones. Gabbros and
layered gabbro mylonites were collected from the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR), ODP
Hole 735B. Deformation temperatures are constrained by two-pyroxene thermometry,
stress is estimated from grain size, and deformation mechanisms are analyzed by
microstructure and the presence or absence of a lattice preferred orientation (LPO). Our
analyses indicate that mylonite layers deformed at a strain rate in the range of 10-12 to 10-
11 s-1, while coarse-grained gabbro deformed at a strain rate of approximately 10-14 to 10-
13 s-1. Plagioclase in pure plagioclase mylonite layers exhibit strong LPOs indicating they
deform by dislocation creep. Plagioclase grain size in mixed plagioclase-pyroxene
mylonite layers is finer than in pure plagioclase layers, and depends on the size and
proportion of pyroxenes. Progressive mixing of pyroxene and plagioclase within gabbro
mylonite layers is accompanied by weakening of the LPO indicating that phase mixing
promotes a transition to diffusion creep processes that involve grain boundary sliding.
Our results indicate that experimental flow laws are accurate at geologic strain rates,
although the strain rate for diffusion creep of fine-grained gabbro may be underestimated.
At the conditions estimated for the SWIR crust, our calculations suggest that strain
localization leads to a factor of two to four decrease in lower crustal viscosity. Even so,
the viscosity of lower gabbroic crust is predicted to be similar to that of dry upper mantle
Whiteness and loss in outer East London: tracing the collective memories of diaspora space
This paper explores collective memory in Newham, East London. It addresses how remembering East London as the home of whiteness and traditional forms of community entails powerful forms of forgetting. Newham's formation through migration – its ‘great time’ – has ensured that myths of indigeneity and whiteness have never stood still. Through engaging with young people's and youth workers' memory practices, the paper explores how phantasms of whiteness and class loss are traced over, and how this tracing reveals ambivalence and porosity, at the same time as it highlights the continued allure of race. It explores how whiteness and class loss are appropriated across ethnic boundaries and how they are mobilized to produce new forms of racial hierarchy in a ‘super-diverse’ place
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