Nordic Nations Abandon Welfare Model for Hardline Gang Crime Strategy
Denmark, Sweden, and Norway have fundamentally shifted their approach to gang violence over the past 15 years, moving away from prevention-focused policies toward increased policing and incarceration. The change, driven by high-profile shootings and cross-border crime concerns, signals the erosion of the region's traditionally lenient criminal justice model—with significant implications for prisons, law enforcement budgets, and social policy across Northern Europe.
Originaltitel: Nordic Policy Responses to Gang-Related Crime 2009–2025: Policy Developments and Future Challenges in Denmark, Sweden and Norway
This article presents a document-based analysis of fifteen years of policy responses to gang-related crime in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Beginning with Denmark’s introduction of the first Nordic anti-gang package in 2009, it traces the historical trajectories, political rationalities, and intervention strategies that have shaped Nordic approaches to gangs and organized crime. The analysis identifies three paradigmatic policy shifts: a post-preventive turn, a punitive turn, and a turn towards cross-border crime control. While these shifts have unfolded at different tempos and intensities across the three countries, they represent a regional move away from welfare-oriented prevention toward more security-driven and internationally coordinated strategies. The study demonstrates how local events, such as public shootings, have catalyzed legislative expansion, intensified policing, and the diffusion of carceral logics. The article concludes that these developments challenge the traditional Nordic crime-control model and calls for a renewed, globally informed perspective that balances prevention, proportionality, and international cooperation.