Bar Wars
Contesting the Night in Contemporary British Cities
Hadfield, Phil,
Lecturer in Sociology, Department of Sociology, University of York
Print publication date: 2006
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-929785-6 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199297856.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
In Britain today, if you are in the business of fighting crime, then you have to be in the business of dealing with alcohol. ‘Binge drinking’ culture is intrinsic to urban leisure and has come to pose a key threat to public order. Unsurprisingly, a struggle is occurring. Pub and club companies, local authorities, central government, the police, the judiciary, local residents, drug and alcohol campaign groups, and revellers all hold competing notions of social order in the night-time city and the appropriate uses and meanings of its public and private spaces. Bar Wars explores how official discourses of ‘partnership’ and ‘self-regulation’ belie the extent of fierce adversarial contestation between and within these groups. Located within a long tradition of urban ethnography, the book offers unique and hard-hitting analyses of social control in bars and clubs, courtroom battles between local communities and the drinks industry, and street-level policing. These issues go to the heart of contemporary debates concerning urban civility, alcohol and drugs policies, and the impacts of and justifications for new police powers introduced as part of the Licensing Act 2003 and Violent Crime Reduction Act 2006. The author's experiences as a disc jockey and as an expert witness to the licensing courts provide a unique perspective, setting his work apart from other academic commentators. Bar Wars takes the study of the ‘night-time economy’ to a new level of sophistication, making it essential reading for all those wishing to understand the policing and regulation of contemporary British cities.
Keywords: night-time economy, violence, anti-social behaviour, binge drinking, policing, licensing, alcohol, urban governance, courts, ethnography Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
‘Couldn't Give a XXXX for Last Orders?’: The Politics of the Night
2.
The Uses of Darkness
3.
Paradise Lost: The Rise of the Night-time High Street
4.
Behind Bars: Social Control in Licensed Premises
5.
Contesting Public Space
6.
The Combatants
7.
Rose-coloured Spectacles Versus the Prophecies of Doom (the Shaping of Trial Discourse)
8.
Notes from the Frontline: Licensing and the Courts
9.
Contesting the Night
10.
Shadowing the Night People: A Methodological Postscript
Bibliography
Index
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