See what Nasir Ali thinks is the best method against crime is in the clip above.

On Thursday, it is one year since police officer Andreas Danman was shot to death in Biskopsgården.

The murder was committed by a 17-year-old boy who lived with his mother and sisters in the district.

It has shaken the whole of Sweden and especially the young.

- It's tragic.

It was like a "wake up call", says Nasir Ali, who himself lives in Biskopsgården and has just finished second in high school.

Experiencing greater peace

He and several other SVT Nyheter Väst speak on the spot feel that it has become calmer in the area after the police murder.

- There are not as many who wander around and just hang out, says a girl who, like Ali, works in the summer clearing weeds at Bostadsbolaget.

This summer, the City of Gothenburg is arranging an extra number of municipal summer jobs for summer-high school and upper secondary school students from year eight and up.

5,700 young people have found work, which can be compared with 4,000 last year.

Nina Miskovsky (M) is a municipal councilor in Gothenburg.

Nationally, her party is running for election on harsher punishments and to lower the limit for criminal authority from 15 to 13 years.

But locally, they work with other initiatives, such as more summer jobs.

- We see that we are in a situation now where we want to put in a lot of preventive efforts so that our young people can find a positive way forward in life, she says.