Abstract | This paper discusses two new concepts regarding young people’s involvement in gangs and organised crime. The first, a ‘lens of labour’ draws on data gathered in three Asian countries (Bangladesh, China and Nepal). The labour lens reflects on instrumental drivers for crime, the need for children to work to survive, the moral economy, and an ecological framework of crime and coloniality. The second concept, ‘hyper-agency’, draws on data gathered in the UK with young people engaged in county lines drug selling. The paper argues that the agency young people exhibit within a county lines context is ambiguous and tactical; it has a purpose linked to profit generation, social inclusion and protection. The paper argues that it is important to consider the specific nature of county lines-related agency – one embedded within wider notions of hyper-consumerism, hyper-realities and lives lived online; it is thus a ‘hyper-agency’ which is relevant in this context. I consider the convergences and divergences between these perspectives, research studies and locales, posing questions for global conceptualisations of young people’s involvement in gangs and organised crime. |
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