-
Samenvatting
Public Private Partnerships (PPS) are becoming one of the most popular answers to problems of crime and disorder. In this contribution, the authors research the Collective Shop Ban, maybe the most successful form of Public Private Partnerships currently operating in the Netherlands. A Collective Shop Ban is a civil measure bestowed upon a person by the shop owner, when s/he displays ‘unwanted behaviour’. As a consequence entry can be denied for every shop assembled in the association of entrepreneurs. In 2007 almost 900 people have been denied access to over 450 shops in the city centre of The Hague. This new form of collaboration between police, public prosecution service and entrepreneurs has already been rewarded with the Regional Crime Control Platform ‘safety award’. However, the authors question the effects of this collaboration. They argue that the Collective Shop Ban creates its own public of ‘unwanted shoppers’, that can be banned from a shopping area by devising new terms of exclusion. This ‘public’ is subjected to new means of power, to be applied by private security guards and shop owners. While entrepreneurs celebrate the possibilities of this civil measure, the authors warn for the juridical and ethical consequences of this measure.
Tijdschrift voor Veiligheid |
|
Artikel | De Collectieve Winkelontzegging |
Trefwoorden | winkelontzegging, overlast, (on)veiligheid, voorzorgsprincipe |
Auteurs | Loes Wesselink, Marc Schuilenburg en Patrick Van Calster |
Auteursinformatie |
Toegang tot dit losse artikel kopen
Voor een vast bedrag van € 19,75 (excl. btw) koopt u 24 uur online toegang tot dit artikel. Met deze 24 uur toegang kunt u een artikel online raadplegen en in PDF downloaden en printen.
Per mail ontvangt u een activatiecode waarmee u 24 uur toegang tot het artikel kunt activeren.
24 uur toegang | € 19,75 (excl. btw) |
Uw aankoop activeren
Heeft u een activatiecode, dan kun u uw product hier activeren.