Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
Mass immigration is perhaps one of the most controversial and contested topics of contemporary times. Popular discourse often considers immigration to be a threat to national security and as depleting the country¿s resources. Immigrants themselves are all too often cast as `aliens¿, `demons¿, and `outsiders¿ in the communities they settle; being considered a `crime-prone¿ population. Some key examples of this include the `Italian mafia¿ in America; the `racialised¿ discourse of immigration and crime during the post-war era of immigration; Eastern European immigration more recently along with the referendum on 'Brexit' which has revitalised this debate. The association of immigration with rising crime, disorder and insecurity has not only featured prominently in popular discourse however, it has also been a topic of interest in criminological and sociological literature throughout the last 100 years and continues to be so today. The aim of this module is to challenge and critically assess the `conventional wisdom¿ on the association between immigration and rising crime. Is a dystopian nightmare of violence, chaos and disorder the inevitable consequence of mass immigration? Or can groups live together in harmony in diverse communities? Are immigrants a `crime-prone¿ and `dangerous¿ population or merely perceived as such? Do immigrants themselves have negative experiences as victims of prejudice and hate crime? Can mass immigration actually have the potential to bring benefits to communities, ultimately reducing the local crime rate? These are some of the questions that will be addressed in this module, which explores some of the most up to date and cutting edge research on this topic that turns both the old established theories, as well as common public assumptions, on their head.
Aims
- To introduce students to the key debates surrounding the link between immigration and crime.- To consider the range of perspectives through which this controversial connection between immigration and crime can be explored. - To enable students to critically evaluate established criminological and sociological theories of immigration as a disruption to social order and apply to contemporary social environments. - To enable students to engage critically with theories of social control and how they are applied in research on immigration and crime. - To appreciate the complexity of challenges facing such local criminal justice institutions as the police in engaging with diverse communities for crime control purposes.
Intended Learning Outcomes
Apply the key theoretical perspectives on immigration and its relationship with crime and disorder: 1Engage critically with theories of social control and how they are applied in research on immigration and crime: 1Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the particular challenges facing such local criminal justice institutions as the police in engaging with diverse communities for crime control purposes: 1Critically evaluate established criminological and sociological theories of immigration as a disruption to social order and apply to contemporary social environments: 1Apply broader criminological debates to a case study example of immigration: 1Use internet sources to locate information relating to case studies and be able to evaluate, summarise and synthesise such information: 1Demonstrate critical awareness of how immigration is represented in popular discourse relating to crime and disorder: 1Identify the range of perspectives through which the connection between immigration and crime can be explored: 1
10 hours tutorials 10 hours lectures38 hours tutorial preparation32 hours independent study60 hours assessment preparation
Description of Module Assessment
1: Case Study weighted 100%3,000 word Case StudyA case study where students undertake their own research into a particular immigrant group, immigration period, or location of immigration and critically engage with the way in which this example was associated with crime, disorder and social control. Students will be encouraged to discuss their chosen case study with the module leader beforehand.