Youth Gangs and Community Intervention

Research, Practice, and Evidence

Edited by Robert J. Chaskin

Columbia University Press

Youth Gangs and Community Intervention

Pub Date: March 2010

ISBN: 9780231146852

296 Pages

Format: Paperback

List Price: $50.00£42.00

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Pub Date: March 2010

ISBN: 9780231146845

296 Pages

Format: Hardcover

List Price: $145.00£121.00

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Pub Date: March 2010

ISBN: 9780231519311

296 Pages

Format: E-book

List Price: $49.99£42.00

Youth Gangs and Community Intervention

Research, Practice, and Evidence

Edited by Robert J. Chaskin

Columbia University Press

Although a range of program and policy responses to youth gangs exist, most are largely based on suppression, implemented by the police or other criminal justice agencies. Less attention and fewer resources have been directed to prevention and intervention strategies that draw on the participation of community organizations, schools, and social service agencies in the neighborhoods in which gangs operate. Also underemphasized is the importance of integrating such approaches at the local level.

In this volume, leading researchers discuss effective intervention among youth gangs, focusing on the ideas behind, approaches to, and evidence about the effectiveness of community-based, youth gang interventions. Treating community as a crucial unit of analysis and action, these essays reorient our understanding of gangs and the measures undertaken to defeat them. They emphasize the importance of community, both as a context that shapes opportunity and as a resource that promotes positive youth engagement. Covering key themes and debates, this book explores the role of social capital and collective efficacy in informing youth gang intervention and evaluation, the importance of focusing on youth development within the context of community opportunities and pressures, and the possibilities of better linking research, policy, and practice when responding to youth gangs, among other critical issues.

About the Author

Robert J. Chaskin is an associate professor at The University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration and a research fellow at Chapin Hall. A sociologist by training, his research focuses primarily on community organization and the role of community and community-based efforts to improve the lives of children, youth, and families. He is the coauthor of Building Community Capacity.