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Abstract Policing, Covid-19 and the ‘Rural Idyll’ in Scotland

Buchan, Jamie; Horgan, Shane; Wooff, Andrew; Tatnell, Andy

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Abstract

The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on rural ‘policing’ (broadly defined to include a range of institutions involved in order maintenance) remains relatively under-discussed and under-theorised. The pandemic created particular challenges for these services in rural areas, particularly in the context of increasingly abstract forms of policing following the creation of Police Scotland and other forms of service provision, and the interaction of these with rurally-contingent inequalities. These were especially felt in rural areas, as were concerns about tourism as a possible (social and epidemiological) threat to rural life. Drawing on qualitative data from two projects, we use a novel interdisciplinary synthesis of theories of ‘abstract policing’ (Terpstra et al., 2019) and the ‘rural idyll’ (Cloke 2003) to show how the pandemic acted as a flashpoint for a range of concerns about policing and social order in rurality.

Citation

Buchan, J., Horgan, S., Wooff, A., & Tatnell, A. (online). Abstract Policing, Covid-19 and the ‘Rural Idyll’ in Scotland. Policing and Society, https://doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2025.2481117

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 13, 2025
Online Publication Date Mar 20, 2025
Deposit Date Mar 13, 2025
Publicly Available Date Mar 20, 2025
Journal Policing and Society
Print ISSN 1043-9463
Electronic ISSN 1477-2728
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2025.2481117
Keywords rural policing, Covid-19, local partnerships, institutions, abstract policing, rural idyll
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/4174255

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