Abstract:
The article presents and discusses data on crime related anxieties and attitudes towards urban disorders that was collected in Vienna in the framework of a project on „Jnsecurities in European Cities". Fieldwork was conducted in five European cities (Amsterdam, Budapest, Cracow, Hamburg, Vienna), and comprised both representative surveys and qualitative interviewing in two research sites for each of the cities. The findings in Vienna point to a local "culture of security" rather than to urban subjects being haunted by various sorts of insecurities, and fear of crime in particular. The authors argue that the relative political and cultural continuity of the Viennese welfare state contrasts to the neo-liberal regimes of control that have been described for many late modern societies, and cities in particular. The local welfare state and its institutions have managed to moderate the effects of socio-economic change that has occurred on the global and national level.