First published in 1999, this volume presents arguments which
compare two inner-city wards of Salford and look to introduce such
a subtlety to the understanding of the management of crime in high
crime communities and derive from a longitudinal research study
which took place over a two and a half year period. Between 1994
and 1996, researchers based at the University of Salford and the
University of Keele embarked on research into two similarly
structured neighbourhoods within the city of Salford in the North
of England. This research set out to situate an understanding of
the risk from and fear of crime in a comparative, urban context -
to uncover how people who live, work and go to school in designated
'high-crime' areas manage their routine daily lives and construct
their own responses to 'risk of' and 'fear of' crime. The authors
go on to highlight the similarities between these wards and other
wards with which they have a clear resonance across Britain.
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