Stuart Waiton | Abertay University (original) (raw)
Papers by Stuart Waiton
Tackling antisocial behaviour (ASB) was given central place in the 2004-2008 Home Office Strategi... more Tackling antisocial behaviour (ASB) was given central place in the 2004-2008 Home Office Strategic Plan, Tony Blair describing his government's policy agenda as a cultural 'crusade'. Scholarly attention has often focused upon the implementation of the ASB management agenda but rather less attention has been given to the fast-moving politics behind the developing ASB debate. Following an introductory discussion connecting the 'narrow politics' of ASB strategy to a wider analysis of social divisions and the state of cultural politics in contemporary Britain, the article proceeds to consider 'four phases' embracing key changes, developments and turning points in the politics of ASB.
Bristol University Press eBooks, Aug 31, 2018
Punishment & Society, Jun 17, 2009
The growth of laws, surveillance and policing across society can be linked back to changes under ... more The growth of laws, surveillance and policing across society can be linked back to changes under the Conservative governments of the 1970s and 1980s. However, despite some 'authoritarian' developments at this time, it was not until Margaret Thatcher's demise that there was a quantitative and qualitative shift towards a form of 'governing through crime'. Many of these developments have been associated with the rise of a right wing, or neo-liberal dynamic in society. However, this paper argues that the obsession with crime, antisocial behaviour and the regulation of everyday life did not emerge as part of an aggressive form of neo-liberalism. Rather than there being an energetic politics behind these developments, it is more accurate to see the growth in law and the more direct regulation of society as a consequence of the collapse of politics on both the left and the right. Rather than competing for the conflicting political subject in society, the role of politicians now became to act as advocates for a diminished subject-the crime victim and the vulnerable public. Crime expanded as a field of governance due both to the political elite's sense of diminished capacity and control over society, and with the construction of a more fragile subject that needed increased protection.
Amoral panic: The fall of the autonomous family and the rise of 'early intervention'.
Bigotry, Football and Scotland, 2013
Societies, 2021
This paper analyses the concept of vulnerability as it is applied to university students, and als... more This paper analyses the concept of vulnerability as it is applied to university students, and also staff, to assess the extent to which it has become a new norm that transforms the understanding of the individual—from being more robust, towards a more fragile sense of personhood. We examine the changing use of the term ‘vulnerable’ over time and with reference to the institutionalisation of the ‘vulnerable subject’. The paper relates this to the theoretical discussion about postmodernism and the ‘end of truth’ within academia, with the subsequent emergence of safe spaces as a mechanism for protecting the vulnerable student. Using snowball sampling, a pilot ethnographic study of academics who have experienced, or claim to have experienced, limits on their academic freedom is developed. One conclusion is that limits to academic freedom stem from within the academy itself. This conclusion is related to the growing understanding that student ‘wellbeing’ necessitates the regulation and ‘...
Societies, 2019
Academic freedom is formally supported but often challenged, through activities like no-platformi... more Academic freedom is formally supported but often challenged, through activities like no-platforming and through a sentiment of sensitivity and an understanding that ideas can be harmful. This development is discussed here as a reflection of the rise of the ‘vulnerable subject.’ This paper demonstrates the growing importance of vulnerability as the central human characteristic in (post) modern times and with reference to law and justice practices explains the ‘collapse of the harm principle.’ Developed through Frank Furedi’s theory of diminished subjectivity we will demonstrate the extent to which the vulnerable subject has been institutionalised and adopted as a new (fragmented) norm. Within the framework of diminished subjectivity, the inner logic of vulnerability has a spiralling dynamic—once adopted as a norm, the vulnerable subject’s answer to the question ‘vulnerable to what?’ constantly expands, drawing in ever more areas of life, behaviour, relationships as well as words and ...
Surveillance & Society, 2010
This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on s... more This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on state sponsored surveillance schemes in an attempt to answer the question of why it is that CCTV surveillance emerged at this particular point in history. At one level, advancing technology can allow a ‘surveillance society’ to emerge, yet the extent to which CCTV cameras have spread into city centres and residential areas suggests something more profound has changed in ‘public’ life. The exponential rise in the surveillance of society is often understood to reflect the rise of authoritarianism, perhaps particularly in the UK. Whether from a Weberian, a Foucauldian, or even – and perhaps in particular – a neo-Marxist perspective, this development is often understood as an enforcement of power, resulting from an ideological consensus built around ‘rampant’ neo-liberalism; public life is, in part, understood to be undermined by private interests, the power of capital, or techniques of gover...
British Journal of Criminology, 2009
SAGE Open, 2016
This article has been developed through the experience of working with the various organizations ... more This article has been developed through the experience of working with the various organizations and individuals who have been part of the No to Named Person campaign. The aim of the article is to understand the emergence of the Named Person in Scotland and to explain the significant distance between legislators and policy makers and those who have opposed the Named Person initiative. We propose that the key to understanding these divergent views is predicated upon profoundly different views of the family, the collapse of the ideal of family autonomy, and its replacement with what can be described as “third way parenting.” Here, the meaning of the “Named Person” as laid out in the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014, and the opposing views that have been made against this act are explained. The “Named Person” provision in the legislation, it is argued, has developed with the rise of micro-managerial politics, the construction of the “at risk” child and the anxiety expresse...
This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on s... more This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on state sponsored surveillance schemes in an attempt to answer the question of why it is that CCTV surveillance emerged at this particular point in history. At one level, advancing technology can allow a ‘surveillance society ’ to emerge, yet the extent to which CCTV cameras have spread into city centres and residential areas suggests something more profound has changed in ‘public ’ life. The exponential rise in the surveillance of society is often understood to reflect the rise of authoritarianism, perhaps particularly in the UK. Whether from a Weberian, a Foucauldian, or even – and perhaps in particular – a neo-Marxist perspective, this development is often understood as an enforcement of power, resulting from an ideological consensus built around ‘rampant ’ neo-liberalism; public life is, in part, understood to be undermined by private interests, the power of capital, or techniques of go...
A new report, Freedom’s Orphans, shows that adults are afraid to challenge children. But its prop... more A new report, Freedom’s Orphans, shows that adults are afraid to challenge children. But its proposed solutions would make matters worse argue Stuart Waiton and Simon Knight. There is a scene in Dylan Thomas ’ ‘Under Milk Wood ’ where the character Captain Cat, an old blind sea Captain, stands at his front door listening to the street. From what he can hear he can identify everybody, adults and children alike, by name. How many of us, even with our sight intact, could claim to have the same closeness with our own communities? A new report from the Institute of Public Policy Research (IPPR), Freedom’s Orphans: Raising Youth in a Changing World identifies a world where in today’s Britain not only are adults unlikely to know and interact with local children and young people but are actually afraid of doing so. The report, based on comparative interviews with adults in a number of European
Tackling antisocial behaviour (ASB) was given central place in the 2004-2008 Home Office Strategi... more Tackling antisocial behaviour (ASB) was given central place in the 2004-2008 Home Office Strategic Plan, Tony Blair describing his government's policy agenda as a cultural 'crusade'. Scholarly attention has often focused upon the implementation of the ASB management agenda but rather less attention has been given to the fast-moving politics behind the developing ASB debate. Following an introductory discussion connecting the 'narrow politics' of ASB strategy to a wider analysis of social divisions and the state of cultural politics in contemporary Britain, the article proceeds to consider 'four phases' embracing key changes, developments and turning points in the politics of ASB.
Bristol University Press eBooks, Aug 31, 2018
Punishment & Society, Jun 17, 2009
The growth of laws, surveillance and policing across society can be linked back to changes under ... more The growth of laws, surveillance and policing across society can be linked back to changes under the Conservative governments of the 1970s and 1980s. However, despite some 'authoritarian' developments at this time, it was not until Margaret Thatcher's demise that there was a quantitative and qualitative shift towards a form of 'governing through crime'. Many of these developments have been associated with the rise of a right wing, or neo-liberal dynamic in society. However, this paper argues that the obsession with crime, antisocial behaviour and the regulation of everyday life did not emerge as part of an aggressive form of neo-liberalism. Rather than there being an energetic politics behind these developments, it is more accurate to see the growth in law and the more direct regulation of society as a consequence of the collapse of politics on both the left and the right. Rather than competing for the conflicting political subject in society, the role of politicians now became to act as advocates for a diminished subject-the crime victim and the vulnerable public. Crime expanded as a field of governance due both to the political elite's sense of diminished capacity and control over society, and with the construction of a more fragile subject that needed increased protection.
Amoral panic: The fall of the autonomous family and the rise of 'early intervention'.
Bigotry, Football and Scotland, 2013
Societies, 2021
This paper analyses the concept of vulnerability as it is applied to university students, and als... more This paper analyses the concept of vulnerability as it is applied to university students, and also staff, to assess the extent to which it has become a new norm that transforms the understanding of the individual—from being more robust, towards a more fragile sense of personhood. We examine the changing use of the term ‘vulnerable’ over time and with reference to the institutionalisation of the ‘vulnerable subject’. The paper relates this to the theoretical discussion about postmodernism and the ‘end of truth’ within academia, with the subsequent emergence of safe spaces as a mechanism for protecting the vulnerable student. Using snowball sampling, a pilot ethnographic study of academics who have experienced, or claim to have experienced, limits on their academic freedom is developed. One conclusion is that limits to academic freedom stem from within the academy itself. This conclusion is related to the growing understanding that student ‘wellbeing’ necessitates the regulation and ‘...
Societies, 2019
Academic freedom is formally supported but often challenged, through activities like no-platformi... more Academic freedom is formally supported but often challenged, through activities like no-platforming and through a sentiment of sensitivity and an understanding that ideas can be harmful. This development is discussed here as a reflection of the rise of the ‘vulnerable subject.’ This paper demonstrates the growing importance of vulnerability as the central human characteristic in (post) modern times and with reference to law and justice practices explains the ‘collapse of the harm principle.’ Developed through Frank Furedi’s theory of diminished subjectivity we will demonstrate the extent to which the vulnerable subject has been institutionalised and adopted as a new (fragmented) norm. Within the framework of diminished subjectivity, the inner logic of vulnerability has a spiralling dynamic—once adopted as a norm, the vulnerable subject’s answer to the question ‘vulnerable to what?’ constantly expands, drawing in ever more areas of life, behaviour, relationships as well as words and ...
Surveillance & Society, 2010
This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on s... more This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on state sponsored surveillance schemes in an attempt to answer the question of why it is that CCTV surveillance emerged at this particular point in history. At one level, advancing technology can allow a ‘surveillance society’ to emerge, yet the extent to which CCTV cameras have spread into city centres and residential areas suggests something more profound has changed in ‘public’ life. The exponential rise in the surveillance of society is often understood to reflect the rise of authoritarianism, perhaps particularly in the UK. Whether from a Weberian, a Foucauldian, or even – and perhaps in particular – a neo-Marxist perspective, this development is often understood as an enforcement of power, resulting from an ideological consensus built around ‘rampant’ neo-liberalism; public life is, in part, understood to be undermined by private interests, the power of capital, or techniques of gover...
British Journal of Criminology, 2009
SAGE Open, 2016
This article has been developed through the experience of working with the various organizations ... more This article has been developed through the experience of working with the various organizations and individuals who have been part of the No to Named Person campaign. The aim of the article is to understand the emergence of the Named Person in Scotland and to explain the significant distance between legislators and policy makers and those who have opposed the Named Person initiative. We propose that the key to understanding these divergent views is predicated upon profoundly different views of the family, the collapse of the ideal of family autonomy, and its replacement with what can be described as “third way parenting.” Here, the meaning of the “Named Person” as laid out in the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014, and the opposing views that have been made against this act are explained. The “Named Person” provision in the legislation, it is argued, has developed with the rise of micro-managerial politics, the construction of the “at risk” child and the anxiety expresse...
This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on s... more This paper explores the rise of CCTV in society during the last two decades. It concentrates on state sponsored surveillance schemes in an attempt to answer the question of why it is that CCTV surveillance emerged at this particular point in history. At one level, advancing technology can allow a ‘surveillance society ’ to emerge, yet the extent to which CCTV cameras have spread into city centres and residential areas suggests something more profound has changed in ‘public ’ life. The exponential rise in the surveillance of society is often understood to reflect the rise of authoritarianism, perhaps particularly in the UK. Whether from a Weberian, a Foucauldian, or even – and perhaps in particular – a neo-Marxist perspective, this development is often understood as an enforcement of power, resulting from an ideological consensus built around ‘rampant ’ neo-liberalism; public life is, in part, understood to be undermined by private interests, the power of capital, or techniques of go...
A new report, Freedom’s Orphans, shows that adults are afraid to challenge children. But its prop... more A new report, Freedom’s Orphans, shows that adults are afraid to challenge children. But its proposed solutions would make matters worse argue Stuart Waiton and Simon Knight. There is a scene in Dylan Thomas ’ ‘Under Milk Wood ’ where the character Captain Cat, an old blind sea Captain, stands at his front door listening to the street. From what he can hear he can identify everybody, adults and children alike, by name. How many of us, even with our sight intact, could claim to have the same closeness with our own communities? A new report from the Institute of Public Policy Research (IPPR), Freedom’s Orphans: Raising Youth in a Changing World identifies a world where in today’s Britain not only are adults unlikely to know and interact with local children and young people but are actually afraid of doing so. The report, based on comparative interviews with adults in a number of European
In this readable, short hardback book published by Palgrave, Ellis Cashmore, a professor of cultu... more In this readable, short hardback book published by Palgrave, Ellis Cashmore, a professor of culture, media and sport, and Jamie Cleland, a criminology lecturer at Loughborough University, attempt to expose or at least unpick the ‘dark side’ of football. Using both historical and academic writings on football they incorporate the online feedback of up to 10,000 football fans to understand the nature of violence, corruption, homophobia and racism within football.