David Lammy, Tottenham Member of Parliament, explained on NPR's Morning Edition that Tottenham is a traditionally poor, inner city area, like Queens in New York, that makes up one of the most ethnically diverse districts in all of Europe. He explained that Duggan's death at the hands of the police sparked outrage and disturbance within the Tottenham community that has escalated into the widespread and senseless violence that the world has been witness to over the past several days. In the 1980s, profound racism within the police force directed towards black residents of Tottenham served as a catalyst for rioting and community violence, but, while acknowledging the parallel, Lammy explains that these riots aren't part of a greater war between a community and the police force, but instead senseless acts of violence between neighbors.
Since Saturday, mobs of young Londoners have carried the violence from Tottenham to Liverpool, Hackney, Manchester and Birmingham. Earlier on Morning Edition, Mike Hardy, director of the Institute of Community Cohesion at the University of Coventry, explained that a perception of growing disparities between those with and without wealth and opportunity has fueled the rioting throughout London. Jobless and alienated young people feel their communities are being targeted for cuts, and these youths on the margins of society feel like they're carrying the bulk of the burden imposed on society by the city's economic instability.
When I listened to this broadcast, another piece I'd recently heard on All Things Considered concerning high teen unemployment in the U.S. came to mind. Although the nation's unemployment rate declined to 9.1 percent in July, teen unemployment continues to rise, and currently we're in our third consecutive summer with teen unemployment rates above 20 percent - right now it's 25 percent. By allowing teen unemployment rates to soar, researchers worry that the country's creating a "lost generation"discouraged by bleak prospects and set back skill-wise in an already cutthroat job market.
Analysts have partially attributed the rioting to the government's austerity budget which will bring about billions in spending cuts. NPR reported that
the full impact of spending cuts has yet to be felt and the unemployment rate is stable although it highest among youth, especially in areas like Tottenham, Hackney and Croydon.This last observation is reason for pause. Youths, the party most responsible for perpetuating the riots in London, are the ones hit the hardest by unemployment, especially in the areas that have been the hotspots of chaos over the past few weeks. Some argue that it's not that youths are unemployed, just unoccupied, and that we're just witnessing opportunistic criminality at the hands of young, unoccupied derelicts. Many believe that the creation of new jobs demands investment by the government, not the type of cutback in the budget we're seeing now. Former London mayor Ken Livingstone told the BBC that young Britons are facing "the bleakest future," and so we're seeing senselessness and violence permeating a climate of doubt and fear.
I fall into that lost generation of 16-19-year-old youths across the U.S. facing a future just as bleak as the one Livingstone depicted for young Britons. Before I came home for the summer after my first year of college, I had to make dozens of calls months in advance in order to eventually find just one restaurant in my local area in need of a server for the summer months. After several phone calls, one interview and several training periods where I raked in less than minimum wage, I finally got my summer job; however, it took a toll on my plucky, can-do attitude when I had originally set out with high hopes of joining the workforce, only to realize that virtually no one's hiring right now. I had to put in an inordinate amount of effort to pickup a part-time job in Bedford, a rural small town in southwest Virginia - I can only imagine how much more daunting my search would have been in a city like London, where you have a much more competitive labor market, or even in a city like Washington D.C. where the teen unemployment rate stood at 49 percent just this past June.
Before sociologists dismiss the London riots as a rampage of "opportunistic criminality," let's look at what the U.S. can take away from the turbulence across the pond: The unhappy, unemployed youths at the margins of society bearing the brunt of economic instability are the same youths rioting and pitching missiles at police officers.
It's not just about drawing parallels and connecting the dots, though. Here at home policy makers need to start taking precautions to remedy the sky-high teen unemployment rate, even if no one's anticipating outbreaks of violence or rioting on the scale we've seen in London. On a base level, NPR reported that
studies show the discouraged teenage job seeker can grow up to become a discouraged adult worker who is more likely to be underpaid and even unemployed.That's not the type of future I want to see forecasted for my generation, especially when we've seen the worst-case scenario for that type of discouragement and hopelessness over the course of the past week in London.

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