The arrested Urkagansky unity (abbreviated as AUE) is a term widely known in criminal circles and beyond. What does it mean and what is it used for?
Possible interpretations of the abbreviations AUE
At the moment, there are several possible options for the abbreviation of AUE:
- Arrestant urkaganskoe unity.
- Prisoner criminal unity.
The only true option does not exist, since, most likely, the prisoners themselves use several interpretations of this term.
Arrested Urkagan unity: what does it mean?
Consider an expression.Formally, the term “Prisoner’s Urkagan Unity” summarizes all members of the criminal world, because prisoners themselves perceive their fellow criminal world as a family. It all must obey certain rules and regulations. The arrested Urkagan unity is subject to a specific set of unwritten rules. Arresting mode for all one. He regulates the relations between prisoners, explains how to solve conflicts in the most correct way (by the way, assault and bloodshed is the most undesirable outcome of the quarrel about the prisoner structure) and prevent their occurrence.
When a newly arrived prisoner enters the cell(in the hut, as the convicts say), he can use the abbreviation AUE as a greeting, showing the prisoners their respect for them and the adoption of thieves' laws.
Often, other prison slang is added to the exclamation of the AUE, for example, “lucky suit” (good luck wish), “shining thieves, not cops”, “half the life here, half the life there”, etc.
In addition, AUE is also the name.an informal youth association, whose members (most often young people) are imbued with a prison theme, being free, and strive to live "according to the rules", as is customary in the area, forcing their peers to do so. But a zone is an isolated territory with its own form of life, and very often it is impossible to transfer prison concepts and norms to freedom. The members of these informal associations often indulge in petty crime, again, trying to imitate their "colleagues" from the zone.