This book provides a holistic and interdisciplinary focus on the legal
regulation and policing of football violence and disorder in Britain.
Anchored in ground-breaking ethnographic and participant-action
research, the book combines a crowd psychology and socio-legal approach
to critically explore the contemporary challenges of managing football
crowds. It sets out the processes by which football disorder occurs and
the limitations of existing approaches to policing 'football
hooliganism', in particular the dominant focus on controlling 'risk
supporters', before setting out proposals for fundamental reforms to
both law and policing. This book will be of value to academics,
students, legal and policing practitioners, as well as policy-makers.
The two authors are internationally known experts in the management and
behaviour of football crowds and bring together for the first time over
30 years of research in this area from the disciplines of law and social
psychology.