This article examines recent Swedish criminal policy through a processual framework that distinguishes between criminogenic exposure, social mediation, gated realization, incapacitation, and temporal persistence. It asks whether policy instruments are systematically matched to the levels through which crime is generated, stabilized, and reproduced, or whether policy output is more strongly organized around visible control, reassurance, and downstream intervention. The study applies a theory-informed qualitative document analysis to a strategically delimited corpus of Swedish government propositions and policy writings concerning organized crime, serious violence, youth recruitment, surveillance, coercive powers, sentencing, social prevention, and societal protection. Methodologically, it uses a Human-in-the-Loop Empirical Recursive–Iterative design combining corpus delimitation, relevance mapping, segmentation, calibration, recursive coding, stress-testing, saturation assessment, and analytical freezing. The analysis finds that Swedish criminal policy contains substantial preventive ambition and, in several strategic documents, a comparatively processual understanding of crime. At the same time, the most legally specified, administratively robust, and operationally actionable measures are disproportionately concentrated around surveillance, coercive powers, incapacitation, movement restrictions, sentencing, and recurrence-oriented control. The article develops the heuristic concept of crime-perception politics before crime-prevention politics. This does not imply that policymakers consciously privilege perception over prevention, nor that control-oriented measures are merely symbolic. It identifies a policy structure in which interventions that display state capacity, visible protection, and immediate operational consequence are more consistently institutionalized than measures directed at the broader mediated and path-dependent processes through which crime is reproduced. The article contributes an operational application of prevention fit and prevention misalignment to qualitative criminal-policy analysis. It forms part of the Theorem-Driven Crime Process Research Programme and represents its principal policy-level application to Swedish criminal policy and policy design.
J. E. Fröderberg (Fri,) studied this question.