Title: Juvenile Gangs
1Juvenile Gangs Violence
Multiple Influences on Risk Gangs in a Global
Perspective Cheryl Maxson Department of
Criminology, Law and Society University of
California, Irvine 2005 Summer Institute on
Youth Violence Prevention August 9, 2005
22 Talks for Price of 1!
- Talk 1 Current research on risk factors for
joining gangs - Synthesis of work from last 15 years
- Cumulative risk
- Differential risk of joining by gender and
ethnicity - Talk 2 What we know about street gangs outside
the US - Gangs in Europe
- Comparative studies
- The latest hot topic
- But first, a little context about street gangs
3Why Gangs?
- Proliferation of gangs in the US since the 1980s
law enforcement surveys, especially National
Youth Gang Center annual surveys - Prevalence of gang joining self-report
- Gang crime patterns recent longitudinal
self-report studies
4NYGS 2002 National Estimates
- 731,500 gang members
- 21,500 gangs
- 2300 cities and 550 county jurisdictions
- BUT, the story here is that big cities contribute
lots of gang members, small cities contribute
lots of gang places
5Patterns of Gang City Proliferation
- Bigger cities onset before 1991, especially
1986-1990 - Smaller places (lt 50K), 1991-5
- Gang desistance marked declines between 1997
2002 in all categories except large cities. - Gang cities is blunt instrument.
6Prevalence of Gang Joining youth self-report
studies
- 18 studies, past 15 years
- 2 dozen US cities, Canada, the Netherlands,
Scotland Germany - Study samples and gang definitions vary
- General population or risky area/subjects
- Group illegal activity, name, symbols, etc.
- Current membership or ever
7Study samples and definitions make a difference!
- 6-8 Restricted, current members
- 13-18 Restricted, risky population
- 19-30 Unrestricted, risky population
8Strongest message
- Even with unrestricted, risky samples
- 7 or 8 out of 10 youth DONT join gangs!
- But those that do.
9Crime Patterns Gang Membership
- Youth affiliated with gangs commit the majority
of all serious, violent crimes in longitudinal
study samples
10Offending Gang Membership
- Slightly elevated offending profiles (or not)
prior to joining - Big increase in offending during period of gang
membership - Big decrease after leaving
- Effect of membership on offending over and above
having delinquent friends
11- BUT, these studies also show majority of gang
members join and leave within one year. - SO, there is something about the group dynamics
in gangs that contributes to these elevated rates - AND a lot to be gained in crime and violence
reduction by preventing gang joining, or reducing
length of membership
12Risk Factor Research
- Public Health Approach
- Policies, programs should focus on reducing risk
- Prevention over Suppression or Rehabilitation
- Pluses Not theory-limited, pragmatic local
focus
13Risk Factor Research
- Neighborhood, Family, Peer, School Individual
- Risks span these arenas
- Risks are cumulative
14General Observations
- Individual, family peer characteristics more
often studied than school or community - Longitudinal studies confirm the more frequent
cross-sectional studies - More multivariate analyses needed
15Consistent or Mostly Supported
- Negative life events (I)
- Non-delinquent, problem behaviors (I)
- Delinquent beliefs, norms (I)
- Parental supervision (F)
- Characteristics of peer networks (P)
- Affective dimension of networks (P)
16Mostly not support
- Self esteem (I)
- Family poverty/disadvantage (F)
- Family structure (F)
- Family attachment (F)
- Unsafe school environment (S)
- Criminogenic neighborhood indicators (C)
17Jury still out
- Internalizing behaviors (I)
- Conventional activities (I)
- Attitudes toward the future (I)
- Parenting style/hostile environment (F)
- Family deviance (F)
- Educational commitment/aspirations (S)
- Educational attachment (S)
- Academic achievement (S)
- Area crime measures ( C)
18General Findings
- Weak evidence among school, community categories
(need more studies) - Confirms the import of peer networks
- Not as much support for family categories
- Individual stress, externalizing behaviors and
delinquent norms
19A Note on Cumulative Risk 5 studies
- Gang probabilities increase as risk factors pile
on top of one another, and from different
domains. - RYDS 21/40 risk factors 43 of males in this
group are gang members. - Predictive capability of risk factors
- Intervention on 40 risk factors?
20Risk Factor Research Problems
- Modest consensus on important risk factors
- Multivariate analyses
- Direction for program development
- Cumulative risk also limited
- Protective factors?
21Different risk factors for girls?
- Fewer identified risk factors for girls
- Most risk factors for girls also apply to boys
- Each study identifies unique risk factors for
girlsgender-specific programming? BUT none
emerges in more than one study - General realm of school experience might be
different.
22Other ? About Differential Risk
- For different ethnic groups? Nothing
- For different age groups? Nothing
- For core vs. fringe involvement? Probably
different risk constellations not demos - For transient vs. multiyear involvement? No
23Juvenile Gangs Violence
Gangs in a Global Perspective Part II Cheryl
Maxson Department of Criminology, Law and
Society University of California, Irvine 2005
Summer Institute on Youth Violence
Prevention August 9, 2005
24- Talk 2 What we know about street gangs outside
the US - Gangs in Europe
- Comparative studies
- The latest hot topic MS-13
25Eurogang Research Definition
- Any durable, street-oriented youth group whose
involvement in illegal activity is part of their
group identity.
26(No Transcript)
27How Different Are Gangs in Europe?
- Summarizing over accounts in several sites,
European gangs have structures that we recognize
in US gangs (Weitkamp, 2001) - Comparative studies
28Denver and BremanHuizinga Schumann, 2001
- 13-14 of adolescents in both samples identify as
a member of gang or bande over adolescence - Both groups contribute substantially to
delinquency, especially violence - In Breman, few drug sales
29US and the NetherlandsEsbensen Weerman, 2005
- 6 (N) 8 (US) current members,
cross-sectional, mean age 14 years - Gang/nongang ratios on 8 risk factors the same
- Gang/nongang ratios on offending the same 4x
except property in (N) nearly 7x - Gang characteristics US larger more organized
(symbols, rites, rules, leaders)
30Gangs in Mexico, Central America
31Moral Panic or Unique Gang Problem?
- MS-13 in several US locations, Canada, Mexico,
Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador - 18th street too
- Mostly media law enforcement sources
- Lots of agency collaborations, task forces
- Immigration policy, deportation
- Mano dura, other suppression tactics