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・ Symbolic communication
・ Symbolic computation
・ Symbolic convergence theory
・ Symbolic culture
・ Symbolic data analysis
・ Symbolic dynamics
・ Symbolic ethnicity
・ Symbolic execution
・ Symbolic Gesture
・ Symbolic integration
・ Symbolic Interaction (journal)
・ Symbolic interactionism
・ Symbolic linguistic representation
・ Symbolic link
・ SYmbolic LinK (SYLK)
Symbolic location
・ Symbolic Manipulation Program
・ Symbolic method
・ Symbolic modeling
・ Symbolic power
・ Symbolic power of a prime ideal
・ Symbolic programming
・ Symbolic racism
・ Symbolic regression
・ Symbolic religiosity
・ Symbolic representation
・ Symbolic self-completion theory
・ Symbolic simulation
・ Symbolic Sound Corporation
・ Symbolic speech


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Symbolic location : ウィキペディア英語版
Symbolic location
A symbolic location is an expression coined by Sir Kenneth Newman, when he was Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police Service (the Met) from 1982 to 1987. The term was used by the police in London in the 1980s to refer to a no-go area, one regarded by local youths as their territory, where police were viewed as intruders.〔Rose, David. ''A Climate of Fear''. Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd, 1992, pp. 31–32.〕 John Smith, former deputy commissioner of the Met, said in 1991 that the term was no longer in use.〔Rose 1992, p. 224.〕
Symbolic locations were identified with high unemployment, a high crime rate, drug dealing, and illegal drinking and gambling. Newman said in 1983 that they "equated closely with the criminal rookeries of Dickensian London," and symbolized the inability of the police to maintain law and order.〔Newman, Kenneth. "Policing London, post Scarman," Sir George Bean Memorial Lecture, October 24, 1983, cited in Rose 1992, pp. 31–32.〕 In a report that year to the Home Secretary, he offered as examples Broadwater Farm in Tottenham, Railton Road in Brixton, and All Saints Road in Notting Hill.〔 Stonebridge Estate in Harlesden was cited as another example, as was the Notting Hill Carnival.〔Cashmore, Ellis and McLaughlin, Eugene (eds). ''Out of order?: Policing Black People''. Routledge 1991, pp. 8, 36–37.〕
P.A.J. Waddington wrote in 1999 that the police sought on occasion to restore—"take back"—symbolic locations as public spaces, leading to raids under a pretext of breaking up criminality.〔Waddington, P.A.J. ''Policing Citizens: Authority and Rights''. Routledge, 1999, pp. 18–19.〕 The term was criticized for identifying largely black communities in England with crime, or as a social problem. John Solomos and Les Black argued in 1996 that such thinking was an example of "profound historical amnesia," because, they wrote, Britain has a long history of civil unrest.〔Solomos, John and Back, Les. ''Racism and Society''. Palgrave McMillan, 1996, p. 182.〕
==Notes==


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