Title: Sports Spectator Violence and Disorder.
1Sports Spectator Violence and Disorder.
2Generic Issues in Crowd Behaviour
- What is the difference between violence,
disorder and carnivalesque behaviour? - How are these terms defined by various interest
groups? - What are the influencing factors?
- Type of sport
- Relationship of fans to players
- National context
- Emotion and Identity
3Football Fan Behaviour
- Has football-related spectator violence gone
away? - Has football spectator behaviour changed over
time? - Have explanations of football spectator behaviour
evolved? - Is all football-related spectator violence the
same?
4Five Principal Explanationsfor Football
Hooliganism
5Football Hooligans as Undesirable Sports
TouristsTowards a Typology of Explanations
- Routinisation and Purpose of Trip
- Leisure Activities / Day-Trips / Short-Breaks /
Holidays - Ritual / Cultural Inversion
- tourism involves for participants a separation
from normal instrumental life and the concerns
of making a living, and offers entry into another
kind of moral state in which mental, expressive
and cultural needs come to the fore - Tourism as the Consumption of Experiences
- Hooliganism as a commodity
6A Speculative Typology ofExplanations for
Football Hooliganism
7A Speculative Typology ofExplanations for
Football Hooliganism
8Marsh (1984), Marsh et al (1978)
- Examined hooliganism in late 1970s
- Identified hooligan careers
- Little violence, much posturing
- aggressive behaviour, taunting and baiting,
boasting about fights - Fans would withdraw at point of physical
violence, or rely on being dragged away by
friends - Attempting to make opposing fans back down first
- a game of bluff rather than actual fighting
- BUT, this is never acknowledged, even within the
group
9England Fans _at_ Euro 2000
- Tournament took place in June 2000 in Holland and
Belgium - England were eliminated after group stages
- Much media coverage of potential for trouble
prior to tournament - Widespread reporting of incidents before, during
and after the match with Germany
10England v Portugal (Monday 12th June)
- Almost no trouble
- Factors
- approach of Dutch Police
- we want to make a positive contribution to the
festive - nature of such an event. You dont do that by
policing - to firmly. So its balancing between maintenance
of - public order and being a real host to the fans
- (Theo Brenkelmans, Dutch Director of Police
Intelligence) - midweek game, no historic rivalry - real
hooligans were waiting for weekend match with
Germany
11England v Germany (Saturday 17th June)Initial
Response
- Charlerois main square, the Place de Charles
II, which should have been the centre of
celebration, resembled a battleground. More than
200 English yobs attacked German rivals, hurling
chairs and sticks as they went - (Sunday Express, 18/6/2000)
- I had watched with delight as the Belgian riot
police had waded into some 200 English thugs in
Brussels the night before. I counted perhaps 300
hardened English hooligans bringing fear and
mayhem to Brussels and Charleroi - (Times, 19/6/2000)
12England v Germany (Saturday 17th June)Minority
Voices
- there was no riot in Charleroi. There was no
pitched battle. There were no rival mobs
baying for blood. The fighting between English
and German fans in the main square lasted for
about 60 seconds. The clumsy but effective
intervention of Belgian armoured water cannon and
mounted police lasted about five minutes - (Independent, 19/6/2000)
- Compared to Marseilles in the World Cup and even
Copenhagen last month and despite some vivid
television pictures, it was little more than
handbags at 20 paces - (Times, 19/6/2000)
13England v Germany (Saturday 17th June)Belgian
Police Tactics
- The Dutch police had a high-profile,
low-friction approach which worked extremely well
and brought out the best in the English fans.
Here, on the day before the game the policing was
non-existent until it was too late. Then after
one or two problems had developed, the policing
became heavy handed and indiscriminate. There
can be few methods of policing less precise than
firing tear gas into a crowded pub and arresting
everyone who emerges - (Kevin Miles, Football Supporters Assn.,
19/6/2000)
- As a retired police officer with lots of public
order experience (Miners Strike, London Marches),
I failed to see any evidence of gross public
order offences by English fans. If that same
policing had taken place in this country, many of
the officers would be serving jail sentences - (BBC Panorama website, 22/6/2000)
14England v Germany (Saturday 17th
June)Contribution to violent images
- It is clear that over the weekend the Belgians
decided that a heavy show of force with water
cannon, tear gas, dogs and truncheons was the
most effective deterrent pour encourager les
auters. At a loss to know how to deal with the
rioting they seemed to have rounded up everybody
in sight - (Daily Telegraph, 19/6/2000)
- When the police eventually moved in yesterday
their behaviour was unbelievable, they tipped-off
journalists and TV crews that they were about to
lift some Germans in a bar and in the melee
thousands surged towards the incident. Thats
when it went-off as they say. But of course it
did! - (Observer, 18/6/2000)
15Dynamics of Euro 2000 Incidents
- 10 per cent are outright trouble makers (the
thugs) 10 per cent respectable supporters (the
fans) and a depressing 80 per cent are
good-humoured, aggressive, drunken, racist,
foul-mouthed boors (the slobs). To tell the
thugs and the slobs apart is almost impossible.
All were dressed in shorts and baseball caps and
bandanas, sports shoes and expensive watches.
Most were in their late thirties or early
forties. The slobs try vaguely to keep out of
trouble but are all too happy to pitch in once
the aggro begins. The answer is to appeal to
the better nature of the slobs and isolate the
thugs who are beyond reason - (Independent, 19/6/2000)
- while only 10 want to start trouble, another
30 hang on to their coat tails and perhaps more
behave in a way that is unacceptable to any
civilised community. There was one in the crowd
in Charleroi on Saturday. Shirt off, swaying, on
each chorus of No Surrender he thrust out his arm
in a Nazi salute. I didnt see him hurt anybody,
but is it acceptable? - (Daily Express, 19/6/2000)
16Explanations for Euro 2000 IncidentsEnglish
Social Culture
- Of the 800 fans arrested by Belgian police, some
were innocent, and many were guilty of being no
more loud and obnoxious than the average pub on a
Saturday - (Guardian, 20/6/2000)
- the hooliganis likely to be a professional in
his 20s, the sort of bloke you see down the
boozer, getting loud and giving it large the
kind of man who belts out God Save the Queen
whenever hes drunk - (Observer, 18/6/2000)
- English popular culture encourages and even
glorifies such conductmuch of what passes for
social life in England is actually a low
intensity riot - (Sunday Telegraph, 18/6/2000)
- The fundamental problem is that English social
culture is drunken and aggressive - (Guardian letters, 20/6/2000)
17Explanations for Euro 2000 IncidentsCultural
Inversion
- There has been a hard core among Englands
travelling support for a long time which has a
racist core. But probably more significant in
numbers is a body of people from various
different clubs around the country who wouldnt
dare, or wouldnt even dream, of voicing such
sort of sentiments in the context of their home
club support - (Kevin Miles, FSA , 20/6/2000)
- In contrast to Germany, where a very clear
division exists between normal supporters and
hooligans which facilitates the work of police
officers, Englands supporters are a mix. An
apparently peaceful supporter can join the ranks
of the troublemakers. It all depends on
circumstances, resistance to alcohol, or
solidarity against a common adversary - (Le Monde, France, 19/6/2000)
18Euro 2000 Summary
- Context of English culture of patriotism and
nationalism which manifested itself as - racial hatred
- anti-IRA sentiments
- range of insults harking back to war
- Little violence, but much unpleasant,
unacceptable aggressive posturing - game of bluff rather than actual fighting
- boasts of facing down other countrys fans,
making them surrender as had done in the war - The above, alongside violent response of Belgian
police contributed to images of riots
one sees aggression, but violence itself is
surprisingly rare - one has, instead, an illusion
of violence (Marsh, 1984 278)
19Policy ResponseThe Football (Disorder) Act
December 2000
- Amended the Football Spectators Act (1989)
- Allowed Banning Orders to be made on a
complaint - if it appears to the officer that the
respondant has at any time caused or contributed
to any violence or disorder in the UK or
elsewhere - Also states that violence and disorder are
not limited to violence and disorder in
connection with football.
20Policy ResponseThe Football (Disorder) Act
December 2000
- Stirring up hatred against a group of persons
defined by reference to colour, race, nationality
(including citizenship) or ethnic or national
origins, or against an individual as a member of
such a group - Using threatening, abusive or insulting words or
behaviour or disorderly behaviour - Displaying any writing or other thing which is
threatening, abusive or insulting
21Further Policy ResponseHome Office Working Group
on Football Disorder (March 2001)
- First government report to recognise link between
football hooliganism and wider social forces. - Remit
- to reduce, by means other than new legislation,
the level of football disorder
(Home Office, 2001) - Recommended the replacement of the England
Members Club (1300 members of which were
identified by The Guardian as the committed
racist hardcore of Englands support) with a
Club England that would focus on initiatives that
would - encourage a fan base more reflective of a modern
multi-cultural society (Home Office,
2001)
22Further Policy ResponseHome Office Working Group
on Football Disorder (March 2001)
The problem is xenophobia rather than racism.
There are people who follow England and refuse to
accept anything foreign!
Perryman (2000)
This is perhaps THE central problem in tackling
disorder among fans following England, a
xenophobic attitude that sees England and
anything English as superior to any other
nationality or culture
Weed (2001)