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Theoretical Criminology
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Marginalized white ethnicity, race and crime

Colin Webster

Leeds Metropolitan University, UK

White ethnicity is generally invisible and unexamined in racism, crime and justice debates. Serving mostly as a default comparator to describe visible minority experiences of crime and criminal justice processes, white ethnicity is seen as unproblematic as an ethnicity except as a potential source of racism. This article draws on aspects of `whiteness studies' in the USA and UK—focusing on marginalized white ethnicities—to explore racialized `white' ethnicity, both historically and today. Designations such as white `underclass', `new' migrants, `white trash' are offered to show that some whites are seen as `less white' than others within a hierarchy of `whiteness'. The article concludes that racism and classism towards marginalized white working-class ethnicities have criminalized these groups in ways not too dissimilar from the criminalization of visible working-class minorities.

Key Words: class • ethnicity • social exclusion • social marginality • whiteness

Theoretical Criminology, Vol. 12, No. 3, 293-312 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1362480608093308


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