gangs in England are active in several cities, most notably in the larger cities such as London, Manchester, Birmingham and more recently in areas of Bradford and Liverpool. Three quarters of gang related crime particularly gun crime is centered around London, Birmingham, and Manchester however. There has also been media coverage in previous years of Great Britain: Blair war on yob gangs (Sweeping new legislation :: KEYWORDS: blair; britain; cultureofrespect; eurabia; gangs; greatbritain; A new body called Natural England will be created to integrate English Nature, http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1405399/postsHOME | British Street Gangs Battle it Out on YouTube « St. Louis CofCC Blog:: British Street Gangs Battle it Out on YouTube August 24, 2007. Posted by Webmaster in England, Britain and the UK, Minority Crime. http://stlcofcc.wordpress.com/2007/08/24/british-street-gangs-battle-it-out-on-youtube/HOME | gangs active in Leeds, Bristol and Nottingham although to a far lesser extent than the other major cities. The three aforementioned cities featured in a number of sensationalist articles in the earlier part of this decade when stories of turf wars and gang feuds frequented in national and local newspapers. Bristol, Leeds,and Nottingham have since received lots of national media attention for their role in British gang involvement. However, police in Leeds reported that there was no such problem anymore and Nottingham has seen large decreases in gun crime despite the media still referring to the city as Shottingham. The more violent gangs are reported to be taking strongholds in smaller towns and cities such as Keighley (outside of Bradford) in West Yorkshire. England: "Warfare on our streets" [Archive] - THR:: She was interviewed by the BBC and told them how much safer England is because they don't have guns there. Melissa honey, the gangs in Merry Ole England do http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-1677.htmlHOME |
Many researchers have rejected the existence of gangs in the UK because they do not fit the stereotypes of American Rural Women Workers in Nineteenth-Century England: Gender, Work - Google Books Result:: href=http://books.google.com/books?id=Khke72FF-8sC&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=gangs+in+england&source=web&ots=hkbgC29kbv&sig=kE0v_us5MKTdN0UlZ4U0tJjJfzI&hl=en class=l onmousedown=return clk(this.href,,,res,90,)>Rural Women Workers in Nineteenth-Century England: Gender, Work - Google Books Resultby Nicola Verdon - 2002 - Social Science - 240 pagesWomen who participated in gang labour in eastern England were especially vilified as being a disgrace to the female sex. We saw in Chapter 2 that disquiet http://books.google.com/books?id=Khke72FF-8sC&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=gangs+in+england&source=web&ots=hkbgC29kbv&sig=kE0v_us5MKTdN0UlZ4U0tJjJfzI&hl=enHOME | VirtueOnline - News - News - ENGLAND: Adults to Blame for Feral :: ENGLAND: Adults to Blame for Feral Gangs Says Archbishop Williams in new controversy By Cyril Dixon and John Chapman The Express http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=7818HOME | gangs. However, Klein (2001, 2004, 2005) suggests that many American gangs also do not fit these stereotypes. In 2001 a book entitled the Eurogang Paradox was published. Klein (2001) who coined the term did so in response to this denial of street gangs in Europe.
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