Friday, 2 March 2012

Case Study Research




'How have British youth been represented through different media in the London riots?'

The pair shook their heads as the jury foreman returned the unanimous verdicts.
As he left the court, Kafunda said: "You're sending an innocent man down, bruv, innit."
The original attacker had punched Mr Rossli in the face so hard he later needed to have metal plates inserted in his jaw.
He was later identified as Beau Isagba, 17, of Ilford, who will be sentenced for the attack on March 9, the day after his 18th birthday.

http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16180945

An 11-year-old boy has been handed an 18-month youth rehabilitation order for stealing a bin during the riots.
Scotland Yard said the child, from Romford in Essex, is the youngest rioter in London to face prosecution.

http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16060069

Figures supplied to Westminster North MP Karen Buck by the House of Commons library show that some of the neighbourhoods where the trouble was most extreme last month are characterised not only by high levels of economic deprivation but also by high proportions of 10-to-19 year-olds, sometimes as much as 18%. Wards in Croydon, the southern end of Enfield, Greenwich and, specifically, Haringey's White Hart Lane ward are simultaneously in the top 10% on the deprivation index and 14% or more - over one in seven - of their populations in that 10-19 age group.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/davehillblog/2011/sep/19/london-riots-youth-deprivation-overlap

the riots also reflect the alienation and resentment of many young people in Britain, where one million people from the ages of 16 to 24 are officially unemployed, the most since the deep recession of the mid-1980s.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/10/world/europe/10youth.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all



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