Origins The concept of mugging originated in the United States in the 1940s.
Blackouts during
World War II enabled people to commit crimes in the dark, inciting the popularity of muggings in cities such as
Baltimore. Mugging narratives were
racialized since the origin of the concept, and, in the post-war era, media in New York City associated mugging with
the Black population. African-American communist politician
Benjamin J. Davis Jr. described such reports as "exaggerated
crime wave slander", and the journal
Phylon wrote that conservative media aimed to "create a
Negro crime wave".
1970s British phenomenon The term
mugging was first used in British media in the 1960s. The media frequently reported waves of muggings from 1972 to 1976, a time when the concept of
fear of crime gained recognition. Prior to this era, the British public had considered mugging to be limited to American cities. Commentators of the time compared ethnic tensions in British cities to those in America, and the association of mugging with the
criminal stereotype of African Americans spread to Britain. Similar crimes in Britain had previously been called "robbery with violence", "assault and robbery", "robbery and grievous bodily harm", or "bag snatching". Such crimes had been increasingly reported starting in the mid-1960s, and many newspapers reported police statistics saying that London's mugging rate increased 129% between 1968 and 1972. During this time, urban residents gained awareness of the risk of victimization, especially in middle-class neighborhoods whose residents had not expected crime. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, many muggers were
West Indian youths, largely due to socioeconomic discontent. Police departments strengthened
crime control measures. Some, including London's
Metropolitan Police and
London Transport Police, utilized "anti-mugging" units, which primarily focused on West Indian–majority neighborhoods. Police associated the crime with West Indians, despite high rates of mugging in some cities with low Black populations and a 1976 Metropolitan Police report to the
Home Affairs Select Committee that said crime rates of West Indians were the same as the general population. Muggings received disproportionate media attention compared to other crimes that occurred in White-majority areas. Television reports frequently featured elderly women who were victims of mugging, and this demographic gained a widespread fear of the crime, though men were more likely to be victims. A mugging case in
Handsworth, West Midlands, on November 5, 1972, resulted in three teenagers being sentenced to twenty years of prison and received widespread newspaper coverage. A column by commentator John Akass in
The Sun, a widely circulated
tabloid newspaper, wrote that the case's perpetrator "did not get 20 years for mugging. He got it for attempted murder," and that the punishment was "almost as barbarous as the crime itself". The fatal stabbing of an elderly man, soon after the Handsworth case, was the first individual crime in Britain to be reported with the word
mugging. Some leftist criminologists believed that the widespread attention to mugging was a result of the media rather than circumstances contributing to crime. However,
Jock Young said in 1976, "It is unrealistic to suggest that the problem of crime like mugging is merely the problem of mis-categorization and concomitant moral panics." In the late 1970s, public opinion largely associated mugging with Black people. Politician
Enoch Powell referred to mugging as a "black crime" in 1976. A 1979 study found that two types of crime were disproportionately associated with black youths: mugging and
being suspicious. described mugging as a
moral panic. The 1978 book
Policing the Crisis, cowritten by
Stuart Hall, labeled the phenomenon as a
moral panic and argued that the media ideologically conceptualized mugging. The book said that mugging was not defined in law or distinct from existing crimes, but that the concept was influenced by preexisting societal concerns and
anti-Black sentiment, as well as by the connotations of the word
mugging in America. It argued that political and media figures used mugging to direct public fears about public disorder toward Black youths, that the government used this attitude to secure support, and that media coverage of the Handsworth case exemplified the undue attention to the subject. The book disagreed with the belief that the
crime rate was increasing; some critics, including Nob Doran and
P. A. J. Waddington, said that its use of statistics was biased. Unlike Hall, Michael Pratt stated that London's rate of mugging was increasing and that the Metropolitan Police's had a legal classification equivalent to mugging. Colin Sumner challenged the description of mugging as a moral panic, saying that media statements did not equate to
public opinion. Discussion of mugging in the
British Parliament increased through the 1960s and 1970s (alongside that of
burglary) and peaked in the 1980s. By that time,
riots, rather than muggings, were the subject of racialized media coverage. A survey by the
Home Office, published in March 1982, recommended
community policing to resist mugging and criticized excessive media response, but its findings received little attention. Public fear of mugging peaked in the 1990s and was most prevalent among people who grew up during the era of the media phenomenon.
1990s–2020s Brazilian media in the 1990s reported a phenomenon of mass mugging and
organized crime, termed (). The term was coined for 1992 reports of mass muggings on beaches in the wealthy
southern region of Rio de Janeiro. The only injury of these incidents was caused by a police officer, and only two muggings were reported, but many people believed there was a high rate of unreported muggings. Newspapers associated the with youths, particularly of the subculture, fans of the African-American
funk music genre. According to anthropologist Ben Penglase, this media wave was similar to the racist reports of mugging in 1980s Britain, despite not explicitly mentioning race. In Portugal, a twelve-day media wave about mass mugging began after a report by
Lusa News Agency on June 10, 2005, about crime at
Carcavelos Beach. Media reports used the word , though police said there was no evidence of it. Most national news outlets and many politicians framed it as a mass mugging. Reporters gave more attention to unrelated acts, mostly by racial minorities, to support a mass mugging wave. In the 2000s,
conservatives in the United States used the thesis, "A liberal is someone who has not been mugged," in support of a
law and order ideology, though being a victim of crimes such as mugging was not correlated with conservatism. American media in the late 2000s frequently reported accounts of "payday muggings", which supposed that
Mexican Americans, who were thought to be likely to be
undocumented and lack resources, were targeted by primarily Black muggers. Rates of personal robbery decreased during the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom as there was less night-time economic activity. == Statistics ==