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selected authors
Duleep Allirajah
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Monday 14 March 2011 Anti-social behaviour
Patrick Hayes
First they came for the faux fascists
Left-wing groups now cheering on the state as it restricts the freedom of an EDL member could well be next.

Thursday 10 February 2011
Patrick Hayes
Five reasons why CBOs are worse than ASBOs
The Lib-Cons aren’t merely rebranding anti-social behaviour measures – they are intensifying them.

Monday 1 February 2010
Tim Black
Looking into the native Heart of Darkness
Contrary to the wild claims of the ‘Broken Britain’ brigade, the Edlington child assaults were exceptional, not typical.

Wednesday 16 September 2009
David Clements
Fixing ‘Broken Britain’?
Instead of ever-earlier state interventions in family life, we need an honest debate about how to safeguard children.

Friday 7 August 2009
Jennie Bristow
At last, a serious debate on ‘social evils’
In a challenging new book, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation looks at how therapy culture and individuation have frayed the social fabric.

Tuesday 21 July 2009
Tim Black
Scanning hoodies’ brains: eugenics by the back door?
Is children’s charity Kids Company really planning to send a mobile scanner to examine tearaways’ brains? Yes and no, says the charity’s founder.

Friday 5 December 2008
Martyn Perks
This is no time to call the ‘design police’
By reorganising our lives around suspicion and the fear of crime, design can leave us feeling insecure - and less free.

Monday 17 November 2008
Helene Guldberg
Don’t outlaw boisterous banter in the playground
As Britain launches another Anti-Bullying Week, the author of Reclaiming Childhood says demonising teasing can do more harm than good.

Tuesday 19 August 2008
Neil Davenport
Blaming affluence for crime? That’s a bit rich
David Lammy’s ‘explanation’ for the teenage stabbings in London is a pointed attack on aspiration and prosperity.

Wednesday 28 May 2008
Mick Hume
Why knife crime cuts us to the quick
The deep insecurity in our society has fuelled a national panic, despite the UK having one of the world’s lowest youth homicide rates.

Thursday 22 May 2008
Martyn Perks
Can design cut crime?
Government attempts to ‘design out’ crime by sticking anti-theft, noise-emitting devices around the country will make us feel less secure.

Thursday 27 March 2008
Brendan O’Neill
This war against anger makes me see red
The powers-that-be promote happiness and demonise anger because they prefer us to be little lambs rather than assertive firebrands.

Wednesday 13 February 2008
Martyn Perks
Why we should swat The Mosquito
The launch of the Buzz Off campaign to rid Britain’s streets of a screeching ‘anti-youth gadget’ should be welcomed - and built on.

Monday 14 May 2007
Nathalie Rothschild
Meet Camden’s killjoy ‘barbecue police’
Nathalie Rothschild reports from north London, where a local council’s ridiculous regulations are putting the dampers on a summer festival.

Tuesday 24 April 2007
Nathalie Rothschild
The ‘politics of behaviour’ with a Tory twist
David Cameron has called for a ‘revolution’ against state interventionism into our lives. It’s a good idea, until you read the small print.

Monday 26 February 2007
Tessa Mayes
Naming and shaming ‘enviro-criminals’
Like a poor man’s FBI Most Wanted List, Gloucester Council in England is publishing photos of those it deems guilty of anti-green crimes.

Thursday 9 November 2006
Frank Furedi
Adults behaving badly
The real problem today is not that 'yoofs' are running riot, but that grown-ups lack the confidence to engage with them.

Friday 27 October 2006
Stuart Waiton
The roots of ‘paedophobia’
A new report, Freedom's Orphans, shows that adults are afraid to challenge children. But its proposed solutions would make matters worse.

Monday 12 June 2006
Josie Appleton
Don’t grass, take responsibility
The UK government's latest leaked initiative for dealing with antisocial behaviour seems designed to turn us into a nation of squealers.

Thursday 8 June 2006
Stuart Waiton
A tyranny of ‘respect’
The UK government's obsession with tackling antisocial behaviour is making society even more lonely and fragmented.

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