Abstract
This article provides a critical analysis of race-related urban rioting in the United Kingdom [UK], arguing that such disturbances are rarely spontaneous eruptions of violence but the outcome of enduring structural inequalities, institutional racism, and political and economic exclusion. Drawing on historical and sociological research, the paper traces a continuum of civil unrest from early twentieth-century port-town riots to the 2024 far-right disturbances and the 2011 England riots. It places the centrality of racially biased policing particularly through practices such as the 'sus law' and stop-and-search and of structural disadvantage in shaping community-police tensions. The article also explores the role of populist political discourse, youth criminalisation, educational exclusion, and the media in reproducing racialised narratives around disorder. Emphasising the intergenerational continuity of racialised marginalisation, it argues for a reconceptualisation of urban rioting as a form of resistance shaped by structural injustice and political disenfranchisement. The study concludes that without substantive reforms to education, policing, media representation, and socio-economic policy, the cycle of grievance and subsequent episodes of riotous assembly will likely continue at given points in time within the UK. This article contributes to scholarly debates on race, inequality, and the state, positioning British urban riots within broader global patterns of racialised conflict and resistance.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Equity in Education & Society |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 15 Apr 2025 |