Abstract
This article focuses on the perspectives of young ethnic minorities in the Nordic countries who have experienced various forms of “police stops”, i.e. situations where the police stop them without any reference to a specific event of which the youth are aware. Analytically, the debate is positioned through an intersectionality approach of (un)belonging to majority societies. Across the Nordic countries, we found that the young people described five social markers as reasons for being stopped, namely clothing, hanging out in groups, ethnicity, neighbourhoods and gender. We argue that the police stops explicate how the young men in particular are often forced to think about themselves in terms of “a threat” to the majority and the attributes they have that make them seem like criminals.
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Notes
In Norwegian drabantby is associated with a state policy of building affordable housing arrangements for the working class post-WW2.
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This study was funded by Scandinavian Research Council for Criminology, Research grants for 2016.
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Solhjell, R., Saarikkomäki, E., Haller, M.B. et al. “We are Seen as a Threat”: Police Stops of Young Ethnic Minorities in the Nordic Countries. Crit Crim 27, 347–361 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-018-9408-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-018-9408-9