ABSTRACT
This article assesses recent improvements to Cohen’s original formulation of the concept of moral panic. A case study is made of a moral panic generated in the Dutch media regarding three accusations made by the police concerning booby traps and weapons caches in the squats of Amsterdam. These claims, while shown to be fantastical in nature, gave credence to a ideological discursive formation that portrayed the squatters’ movement as increasingly violent. Squatters were subsequently manufactured as folk devils requiring control via juridical repression, a process that resulted in the criminalization of squatting in 2010.
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E. T. C. Dee
E. T. C. DEE has written on media discourses surrounding the criminalization of squatting in Squatting in Europe: Radical Spaces, Urban Struggles (Minor Compositions) and with Deanna Dadusc in Vulnerable Demons? Moral Rhetoric and the Criminalisation of Squatting (Routledge). He has also written on squatting as a social movement in The Squatters’ Movement in Europe: Everyday Commons and Autonomy as Alternatives to Capitalism (Pluto). More information is available at http://ucm.academia.edu/ETCDee.