La seguridad y el estado democrático liberal. Criminalizando la política de los jóvenes

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
Judith Bessant, Maria Grasso
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The years following the 2008 global recession saw many liberal-democratic states respond to the economic crisis by introducing austerity policies. In turn, this provoked widespread dissent and social movement activism involving large numbers of young people. In response, governments of many different political persuasions moved to suppress these actions by criminalizing political dissent. The article inquiries into state and institutional moves to suppress social movement activism like the ‘Maple Spring’ student strikes in Quebec, Canada, and the Indignados movement in Spain. While Canada can be described as a ‘mature liberal-democracy’ and Spain might be better described as an ‘emergent liberal-democracy’, both criminalized young people exercising their democratic and constitutionally guaranteed rights to free expression and assembly by engaging in various forms of political protests. While some of this can be explained by reference to contradictions inherent in liberal democracies, we consider if it also reflects certain long-standing prejudices directed at young people. Young people have traditionally attracted disproportionate attention from police and legal systems when they are involved in ‘conventional’ criminal conduct. What role if any did the ‘youthful’ face of protest play in government moves to criminalize dissent in 2011-12 An account of the ‘civilizing offensive’ highlights the influence of ageist assumptions that ‘young people’ require close management. This provides some insight into state responses to young people’s engagement in politics when it goes beyond the conventional mode of ‘youth participation’ prescribed by states committed to managing electoral party politics
安全与自由民主国家。将青年政治定罪
在2008年全球经济衰退之后的几年里,许多自由民主国家通过引入紧缩政策来应对经济危机。反过来,这引发了广泛的异议和涉及大量年轻人的社会运动激进主义。作为回应,许多不同政治派别的政府采取行动,通过将政治异议定为犯罪来压制这些行动。这篇文章探讨了国家和机构压制社会运动激进主义的行动,如加拿大魁北克的“枫叶之春”学生罢工和西班牙的愤怒运动。虽然加拿大可以被描述为“成熟的自由民主”,而西班牙可能更适合被描述为“新兴的自由民主”,但两国都将年轻人通过参与各种形式的政治抗议来行使民主和宪法保障的自由表达和集会权利定为犯罪。虽然其中一些可以用自由民主国家固有的矛盾来解释,但我们考虑它是否也反映了针对年轻人的某些长期偏见。传统上,当年轻人参与“传统”犯罪行为时,他们会引起警察和法律系统的过度关注。在2011年至2012年政府将异议定为刑事犯罪的行动中,抗议活动的“年轻”面孔扮演了什么角色(如果有的话)?对“文明攻势”的描述突显了年龄歧视假设的影响,即“年轻人”需要密切管理。这提供了一些关于国家对年轻人参与政治的反应的见解,当它超越了由致力于管理选举政党政治的国家规定的传统“青年参与”模式时
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
53 weeks
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