Snowtown

When the Snowtown murder trial concluded in 2003 a prominent criminologist scandalised the good people of Adelaide by saying there was nothing surprising or remarkable about the case.


New Yorker Allan Perry, a lecturer in criminal law at the University of Adelaide, blamed what he called a subculture of degeneracy in the city’s most depressed and dysfunctional suburbs, defined by inter-generational welfare dependency, the daily abuse of alcohol and drugs, shocking levels of child abuse, child neglect and family violence.

Dr Perry said the only thing which shocked him about Snowtown was that people were shocked by it. And he really cut loose in his description of my hometown, sending talkback and the letters pages into meltdown, and prompting the then Attorney General Mick Atkinson to tell him to move back to Brooklyn.

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  • Another Dave says:

    11:24am | 05/02/12

    Ironic that this appears at the same time as an article about protectionism in Australian manufacturing. Get used to it. As more jobs get exported, intergenerational welfare dependancy and all its associated problems will become more & more common. Read more »

  • Rose says:

    03:17pm | 04/02/12

    I too live in Adelaide’s north. I’ve met wonderful, gainfully employed people here and have also come across those obviously suffering from the effects of low education, parental neglect and little hope for the future. The thing is, I have less trouble with bad behaviour than when I lived on… Read more »

 

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