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  • SHARON HARTLES - CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGIST
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  • The Legacy of Diethylstilbestrol (DES): A Systemic Failure and the Fight for Justice
  • International Workers’ Memorial Day (#IWMD25): Confronting the Deadly Cost of Work
  • The Case for Reforming Scotlands Corporate Homicide Act
  • Robbie Powell 2024: A Legacy of Injustice and the Road to Accountability
  • Grenfell Tower Inquiry 2024: A Report on a System That Never Learns
  • Primodos 2024: The Quest for Justice Continues
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  • Primodos, Mesh and Sodium Valproate: Recommendations and the UK Government's response
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  • Mesh: Denial, half-truths and the harms
  • Brexit, migration and homelessness: the new terrain
  • Homelessness beyond criminalisation: Surviving in a global pandemic
  • Primodos: The next steps towards Justice
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  • SNC-Lavalin: Charges to settlement, have lessons been learned?
  • Unmasking Ineffectiveness: The UK's Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007
  • Bhopal State-Corporate Crime continues to unfold, (1984-Present), 35 years and counting
  • End Child Imprisonment
  • The Grenfell 72 Two Years On: Remember the dead and fight for the living!
  • Unfinished Business: Moving beyond the Australian National Apology (2008) towards Indigenous justice
  • The punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness
  • Dominic Cummings, Covid-19 rule breaking and the truth twisters
  • How have 'crimes' of the powerful been illustrated in the Grenfell Tragedy?
  • Grenfell: a site of global crime, harm and social (in)justice?
  • Prisons Don't Work! A zemiological approach
  • Austerity, social murder and the homeless crisis
  • Medicinal Cannabis Reform in the UK: The Alfie Dingley Injustice
  • Google Scholar Publications
  • Citation Index Tracker - Sharon Hartles
  • Open University Publications
  • British Society of Criminology Publications
  • Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation & Social Exclusion publications
  • European Group for the study of Deviance and Social Control publications
  • University of Strathclyde Publications
  • A decade since the implementation of the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 - NOT fit for purpose
  • An overhaul of the crime and justice systems is now pertinent
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  • Are states powerless to criminalise harms perpetrated by corporations?
  • What factors influence state power?
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  • Are local and global crime and justice systems exploited to aid the harms committed by corporations?
  • Is corporate crime better considered through a social harm approach rather than through the paradigm of crime?
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  • How can the pursuit of security help to explain the punitive shift towards crimmigration law?
  • Oracle
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  • Influential people
  • Recommended reading
  • ReThinking Anxiety by providing an insight into its construction and deconstruction
  • The social construction of the medication of anxiety
  • Grenfell: A Social Harm to a Social Murder!
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The punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness

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Author: Sharon Hartles  posted: 17th September 2018


​In the UK, following the financial crisis of 2007 – 2008, the government response took the form of austerity measures. This has had far reaching implications, one of which being the punitive shift towards the criminalisation of vulnerable and marginalised people within society, such as those affected by homelessness.

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The number of people living in poverty in the UK dramatically increased as a consequence of the governments shift towards market-based capitalism, underpinned by the social-economic reforms endorsed in the 1980s. This situation was further exacerbated by the financial global crisis of 2007 - 2008, which led to the UK government bailing out the British banks to prevent a collapse of the British banking system. Unsurprisingly, the ramification of the government’s decision to bail out the banks initially took the form of a stimulus programme which was superseded in 2010 by austerity measures. The government's spending cuts, as part of these measures, led to a reduction in the budget deficit which has had far reaching impacts on the poorest and most vulnerable/marginalised people in the UK, including those affected by homelessness.  

Since the onset of austerity in 2010, the estimated number of people sleeping rough in England has increased year on year from 2010 - 2017. Approximately, 4,751 people bedded down outside overnight on a snapshot night in autumn 2017 compared to 1,768 people on a snapshot night in autumn 2010. Rough sleeping has therefore more than doubled over these seven years. However, the reason why rough sleepers are becoming more visible in British cities and public open spaces is because support services and hostel availability are diminishing, as a direct result of the government cuts and reform to areas such as welfare. 
 
In July 2014, the Home Office published its reform of anti-social behaviour powers to support the effective use of new powers to tackle anti-social behaviour which takes place in public and open spaces. According to the Home Office reform information, "where the actions of a selfish few ruin these spaces, through public drunkenness, aggressive begging, irresponsible dog ownership or general anti-social behaviour, these places can be lost to the communities who use them”. This powerful form of labelling stigmatises homelessness as othering, the act by which groups of individuals become represented as an outsider and not one of us. Such stigmatisation associated with homelessness limits exposure, opposition, active resistance and the publics' outrage, enabling the government to punitively criminalise homelessness and enforce this through the criminal justice system.

​In England, between 2015 - 2016, 2,365 people were prosecuted for committing vagrancy-related offences including begging. Prior to the financial crisis and the introduction of austerity measures 1,510 people were prosecuted during 2006 - 2007. Vagrancy-related offences have increased by more than 70% in one decade.  In 2014, three men were nearly prosecuted for taking discarded food (cheese, tomatoes and mushrooms) from a refuse bin. In 2015, sixty-two rough sleepers were arrested by the Sussex Police for accepting money from the public. On the other hand, no members of the public were arrested for offering and ​donating money to rough sleepers. 
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Image Source: Michael Donne/Science Photo Library / Universal Images Group

​The resurrection of the Dickensian vagrancy law together with the new Public Space Protection Orders which have been enacted in over 50 local authorities has resulted in a growing number of vulnerable homeless people being fined, given criminal convictions and even imprisoned for street drinking, defecating, urinating, begging and rough sleeping in public spaces.
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​In a bid to save money the UK government implemented a crime control approach to homelessness, concerned with promoting security and controlling crime, in favour of a social welfare approach, concerned with promoting equality, inclusion and well-being. Such a decision to shift to an enforcement-based approach was underpinned by the following political and economic factors: the financial global crisis of 2007 - 2008, coupled with the government's choices to bail the banks out and introduce austerity measures to reduce government spending. This causal relationship between the government's policy to shift towards a crime control approach to homelessness resulted in the punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness. In contrast, only 28 people were 
charged and only 5 people were convicted in the UK for their part in the financial crisis (bankers - guilty of white-collar crimes), which was considered by economists to be the worst and most significant crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. The tax-payers in the UK have borne the financial brunt of the bankers' crimes since 2010 and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. However, there are others such as those affected by homelessness who are fighting for their right to exist, not to be criminalised and not to lose or have their liberty restricted.
 
While homelessness in the UK has increased by 134% since 2010 in line with the imposed austerity measures, homelessness in Finland has fallen by 35% over the same period of time. In contrast to the UK government ushering in its crime control approach that punitively criminalises homelessness, the Finnish government is promoting a social welfare approach and is committed to abolishing homelessness altogether. It is clear that the UK government has scapegoated homelessness to whitewash the financial deficit resulting from the bankers’ white-collar crimes (repackaging loans and playing roulette games with the stability of the global markets). As is common practice through the exercise of, smoke and mirrors the government has orchestrated the punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness in order to divert the publics gaze away from the real crimes and the real criminals who are responsible for causing the worst financial crisis in global history.





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Scholarly article - Google Scholar


This article can be viewed on: 
Article Direct - Google Scholar 01/01/22

This article can be viewed on:

University of Strathclyde Glasgow  01/01/22


This article was chosen as an exemplar Criminology Blog for 2018 by:
The British Society of Criminology  (28/01/19)

This article was republished by: 
​The Open University, Research Centre, Harm & Evidence Research Collaborative 

This article was republished by:
The Harm & Evidence Research Collaborative (29/10/18)

This article was originally published by:

The British Society of Criminology (22/10/18) ​

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​
Please cite this article as:
S. Hartles (2018) The punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness ​ [Online] Available at
sharonhartles.weebly.com/the-punitive-shift-towards-the-criminalisation-of-homelessness.html (Accessed)



ATTRIBUTION

This work is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

​©  Sharon Hartles 2025.




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  • SHARON HARTLES - CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGIST
  • CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGIST - Sharon Hartles publications
  • The Legacy of Diethylstilbestrol (DES): A Systemic Failure and the Fight for Justice
  • International Workers’ Memorial Day (#IWMD25): Confronting the Deadly Cost of Work
  • The Case for Reforming Scotlands Corporate Homicide Act
  • Robbie Powell 2024: A Legacy of Injustice and the Road to Accountability
  • Grenfell Tower Inquiry 2024: A Report on a System That Never Learns
  • Primodos 2024: The Quest for Justice Continues
  • Primodos 2023: Fighting Against the Odds A Denied Opportunity for Justice
  • Bhopal 2023: Unfinished Business Justice Denied?
  • Primodos 2023: The Fight for Justice Continues for the Association for Children damaged by Hormones Pregnacy Tests (ACDHPT)
  • Primodos: Financial redress is long overdue
  • Robbie Powell: Time for Truth, Justice and Accountability - Sharon Hartles
  • Primodos, Mesh and Sodium Valproate: Recommendations and the UK Government's response
  • Sodium Valproate: The Fetal Valproate Syndrome Tragedy
  • Vagrancy Act 1824: Consign it to history!
  • Mesh: Denial, half-truths and the harms
  • Brexit, migration and homelessness: the new terrain
  • Homelessness beyond criminalisation: Surviving in a global pandemic
  • Primodos: The next steps towards Justice
  • Primodos: The first step towards justice
  • SNC-Lavalin: Charges to settlement, have lessons been learned?
  • Unmasking Ineffectiveness: The UK's Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007
  • Bhopal State-Corporate Crime continues to unfold, (1984-Present), 35 years and counting
  • End Child Imprisonment
  • The Grenfell 72 Two Years On: Remember the dead and fight for the living!
  • Unfinished Business: Moving beyond the Australian National Apology (2008) towards Indigenous justice
  • The punitive shift towards the criminalisation of homelessness
  • Dominic Cummings, Covid-19 rule breaking and the truth twisters
  • How have 'crimes' of the powerful been illustrated in the Grenfell Tragedy?
  • Grenfell: a site of global crime, harm and social (in)justice?
  • Prisons Don't Work! A zemiological approach
  • Austerity, social murder and the homeless crisis
  • Medicinal Cannabis Reform in the UK: The Alfie Dingley Injustice
  • Google Scholar Publications
  • Citation Index Tracker - Sharon Hartles
  • Open University Publications
  • British Society of Criminology Publications
  • Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation & Social Exclusion publications
  • European Group for the study of Deviance and Social Control publications
  • University of Strathclyde Publications
  • A decade since the implementation of the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 - NOT fit for purpose
  • An overhaul of the crime and justice systems is now pertinent
  • Is it time the UK government decriminalise homelessness?
  • Are states powerless to criminalise harms perpetrated by corporations?
  • What factors influence state power?
  • Is corporate harm beyond the remit of state power?
  • Are local and global crime and justice systems exploited to aid the harms committed by corporations?
  • Is corporate crime better considered through a social harm approach rather than through the paradigm of crime?
  • CRIMMIGRATION Revealed
  • How can the pursuit of security help to explain the punitive shift towards crimmigration law?
  • Oracle
  • Oracle - Zemiology
  • Influential people
  • Recommended reading
  • ReThinking Anxiety by providing an insight into its construction and deconstruction
  • The social construction of the medication of anxiety
  • Grenfell: A Social Harm to a Social Murder!