Since the nineties, the ‘Moroccan community’ experiences a negative group-image based on a small group of male youths who ‘stand out’ in social problems such as nuisance, crime and Islamic radicalisation. This negative group image is largely constructed through negative societal reactions in the media on incidents in which Moroccan Dutch youngsters play a prominent role. This article examines such negative societal reactions in the media on three recent incidents: the 2007 Slotervaart riots, the 2008 Gouda ‘bus incident’ and the 2010 Culemborg riots. It concludes that the societal reactions to these incidents in the media, are exaggerated, symbolise ‘the Moroccans’ as folk devils and construct them as moral and cultural Others. Finally, it concludes that these negative societal reactions to ‘Moroccans’ in Dutch media can be seen as a disproportional and misplaced, but natural reaction of a dominant cultural majority to a threat to their cultural and moral hegemony, by ‘the Moroccans’ as a social deviant minority.

doi.org/10.5553/TCC/221195072016006001006, hdl.handle.net/1765/98423
Tijdschrift over Cultuur en Criminaliteit
Criminology

Bouabid, A. (2016). De Marokkanenpaniek: de sociale constructie van ‘Marokkanen’ als folk devils. Tijdschrift over Cultuur en Criminaliteit, 6(1), 82–99. doi:10.5553/TCC/221195072016006001006