Title: Youth Gangs in the UK
1Youth Gangs in the UK
- How different are they from their American
counterparts? - Judith Aldridge, Juanjo Medina, Robert Ralphs
- University of Manchester, UK
2Outline comparisons to US gangs
- Context and background
- Prevalence
- History evolution
- Structure, organisation, drug dealing
- Culture
- Ethnicity
- Violence
3 4UK objections to gang research
- Create moral panics
- Demonise young people ASBOs Hoodies
- Stigmatise young people, communities
- Reinforce, glorify, perpetuate, even create
gangs - Nothing new to see here in UK, groups are the
same as weve been seeing/studying for decades
5Top headlines in Guardian newspaper search
- Turf war among drug gangs blamed as youth, 17,
dies after shooting - Drug gangs rampant in top Dublin youth jail
- Youths pick chic Paris mall for gang rumble
- Gang chased youth, 16, and stabbed him to death,
court told
6References to youth gangs in Guardian
newspaper
7Academic papers with youth/street gangs and UK,
Britain, England
8UK Why we persist
- Use of term gang in UK not new
- Must remedy predominant focus in research, police
journalistic accounts on ethnic minority youth - Must balance journalistic accounts that glorify
gangs - Policy transfer from USA NOW occurring
- Demystify gangs
- Challenge overly punitive official responses
schools, government, police
9Context conclusion
- Discussion about gangs is newer
- Different research history (focus more on youth
subcultures, not gangs) - More wariness/fear of the label by academics,
policy makers - But actual use of the term increasing in the last
five years particularly
10 11Prevalence
- YOCJS (10-19 year olds)
- 3 in street gangs, group existed 3m or more,
group commits crime together - NEW-ADAM (arrestees 17 and over)
- 4 in a gang with name and territory
- Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime
(13 year olds) - 3.5 of 13 year old in a gang with a name
special saying or sign - Communities that Care (11 17 year olds)
- 4 in London in a gang with a name and a
territory - Staying Safe Study (14 schools in south of
England) - 3.9 in an offending gang
12Prevalence conclusion
- Difficult to say because of variations in
measurement, samples, age groups BUT - Possibly broadly similar to US
- Nevertheless, undoubtedly lots of very
interesting differences, but research isnt quite
there yet to disentangle them - Some comparative research currently under way
13YOGEC Research design and methods
- ESRC funded ethnographic study 2 years fieldwork
- 3 neighbourhoods in large English city
- Group Characteristics Drug use and dealing
Violence Ethnicity Gender Community relations
and Lifecourse (onset and desistance) - 100 interviews - gang members, associates
(friends, girlfriends, relatives), key informants
(e.g. police, youth workers, local government) - 9 focus groups - non-gang involved young people,
parents, representatives of community/statutory
agencies
14 15History
- RC gangs going back 2 decades, even 100 years
- In Inner West we documented history going back to
80s and early 90s - Predominantly ethnic minority youth
- Drawn to informal economy for standard of living
above basic survival - Specialist drugs gangs operating open drugs
markets - In pyramid structures, dealing heroin crack
- By late 90s until now
- Open to closed markets (mobile phones, police
crackdowns) - Heroin and crack to cannabis
- Gang coordinated to individual dealing
- Greater to lesser earnings
- Combined with legitimate income sources
16History conclusion
- Likely very similar history of gangs
- RC was unusual in this specialist drugs gangs
status in the UK - Evidence anecdotal, police
- In a similar way, American has research
identified these specialist drugs gangs in some
cities (e.g. Chicago) - But like the UK, in the US, specialist drugs
gangs are rare even if drug dealing is common
17- Structure, organisation,
- drug dealing
18Structure, organisation, drug dealing
- Little evidence of hierarchy in these same gangs
- No evidence that X and Y were leaders or
running this gang - In contrast to heroin in cocaine the vast
majority of the dealing we identified was
cannabis - Most dealing not gang co-ordinated sold
individually, 2/3s - Individuals kept all their own profits
- No evidence of dealers being paid a wage at the
lower levels (though this did happen with
runners, though nothing like at this level) - Members do not live extravagantly, more concerned
with status - No "card-carrying" members, loose affiliation
- But this view amongst police new, does it arise
as a result of our report? In all our research,
referred to clear affiliations
19Structure, organisation, drug dealing conclusion
- Probably very similar for most US youth gangs
- Specialist (e.g. drugs) youth gangs in US are the
exception rather than the rule - True of UK too
- Exception we found one specialist girl gang
highly organised, shared profits from illegal
activities, role differentiated - got the job
done, did so without violence or the threat of it - But! Key members of group were sisters/relatives
of highly involved male gang members, group
virtually disbanded now
20 21Culture
- Gang joining probably not that useful a term
- No recruitment
- Consistent with the formation of neighbourhood
and school friendship groups - To join more about developing different kinds
of relationships with existing contacts - Self-protection, labelling and taking advantage
of illegal opportunities define the difference - Cultural identifiers
- No initiation rituals (though proving oneself
sometimes discussed) - Few/no identifiers like colours, tattoos, hand
signs - Few codes of conduct (though a few are patchily
referred to and almost always betrayed) - Few/no organised meetings
- Some of these things may be changing especially
through social networking sites (e.g. MySpace)
22Culture conclusion
- The process of joining is probably very similar
to the US - The idea of joining in both US and UK based on
stereotyped media image - US likely to have more rituals and cultural
signifiers - Even though there are signs this is changing
23 24Media political discourse around gangs and race
- Strong media political tendency to present
black community as responsible for gang problems -
- Tony Blair, April 2007
- The black community the vast majority of whom
in these communities are decent, law-abiding
people horrified at what is happening need to
be mobilised in denunciation of this gang culture
that is killing innocent young black kids.
25Ethnicity
- NEW-ADAM Majority of gang members are white
- Edinburgh Study on Youth Transitions and Crime
94.3 of the sample were white and so were the
overwhelming majority of gang members - Offending Crime and Justice Survey (2004) there
is little to suggest ethnic differences or a
particular over-representation of young black
males in gangs - YOGEC in predominantly white areas, we found
gangs were mostly white in areas with the
highest concentration of black ethnic minorities,
we found gangs that were mostly black
26Ethnicity surprise!
- Areas with higher ethnic (black) population
received media and policy attention - Police claimed not to use race as defining
criteria, but do! - Whilst much more gun violence there (reflects
police priorities) - But white gangs also used guns!
- Thus greater vulnerability of black youth to
discriminatory, aggressive, intrusive policing - White areas complained of discriminatory
neglect! - Black community leaders stuck
- Recognised gun/gang violence in their communities
(empowering?) - But drawbacks to racialising the gang problem
- negative stereotypes about black people,
suspect community, allows for simplistic
explanations, legitimisation of inadequate
interventions, police harassment
27Ethnicity conclusion
- Immigration history, ethnic make-up very
different - UK shorter, less (8), different groups
- Indian sub-continent, Caribbean and Africa
- US longer, more ( 30)
- Hispanic/Latino Black American
- UK less geographically segregated
- Highest ethnic minority areas in RC still mostly
white - We do not have racial ghettos (by definition)
- Gangs arise in areas of deprivation, and their
ethnic composition reflects the composition of
the neighbourhoods that spawn them
28 29How different is contextof violence in the US
and UK?
- In relation to gun crime homicide
- US gt UK
- St Louis gt Research City
- BUT!
- Research City St Louis
30Firearm violence in Research City
- Firearm violence for last 20 years relatively
high in RC for the British context - Disproportionately concentrated in Inner West
- Victims and perpetrators often/mostly gang
affiliated
31Violence in RC gangs
- Gangs did not specialise in violence, generally
tried to avoid it - But! Violence symbolically and rhetorically
important - Potential often present references to, memories
of, violence - Idea of trigger happy gangster motivated to
protect reputation - Alternate conflict resolution strategies employed
- Conflict within gangs as important as conflict
between gangs - More important day-to-day
- About business, friendships, romantic
relationships, family same for most of us - Jealousy and debt recovery were key came up
over and over generally, these are likely
within not between gangs
32Violence and drugs markets
- Violence was linked to drug sales, but not
disputes over markets/customers - Instead, taxing other dealers (same different
gangs) - Played role in gang members arming themselves
- Even in the hey-day of Inner West specialist
drugs gangs, conflict only rarely about drugs
markets
33Unacknowledged trauma
- References to violence, and exposure to violence
as victims, perpetrators and witnesses was part
of everyday conversation and growing up - Ex-girlfriend of key gang member explains
- There was that many shootings at the time that
it was just normal, it was sad and everything,
but then a couple of days later you would have
forgotten about it and somebody else would have
been shot (30 year old woman)
34Interview with female gang member, sister of male
gang member
- I lost the plot when I seen that poor when I
seen that poor boy got shot dead, and in front of
me. I could have took that bullet, it could have
been me dead. I had the Regional Crime Squad, I
had the Murder Squad at me door. Do you know
what I mean? I was getting phone calls shit
myself. I thought, Ive gotta get the fuck out
of the city. Ive gotta get away. And I
couldnt cope with what Id seen, and I cracked
up and went to me doctors. The police werent
interested, they just wanted to get me statement,
I told them to sling it. Do you know what I
mean? Went to me doctors, told him, you know
um, Ive seen someone shot. And he said, Well
you shouldnt put yourself in them situations,
should you?
35Violence
- Different gangs, different violence
- Inner West having, holding, accessing, using
guns all important re gang status - Far West valued the masculinity of physical
fights (being handy) as opposed to cowardly
resort to guns - But access to guns (real and replica) common
across all gangs/research sites
36Sources of violence
- Most violence emanated from interpersonal
disputes - often about friends, family and romantic
relationships - Not linked to disputes about drug markets
- Jealousy and debt motivated a considerable degree
of within-gang conflict - Association (by blood or company) to other gang
members was a risk factor for bullying and
victimisation - By other gangs, by police
- Unsolved violence (esp. murders) by police
resulted in violent vendettas among these gangs
(crime as social control) - Glorified in plethora of recent journalistic books
37Violence conclusion
- Suspect many similarities
- Research in UK early days
- But lack of connection between violence and drugs
markets consistent - Our focus on within gang conflict not discussed
widely in the US - Does not necessarily point to cross-national
differences - Could be our research focus.
38 39Gangs in Research City
- Not well-organised profit making hierarchical
criminal enterprises with an interest on
franchising themselves and active recruitment - But bunch of kids with guns, small minority
older members involved in more serious
money-making criminal activities - Cultural identity as gang not as
institutionalised as in the US - Drug sales now mostly individual activity, not
controlled by the gang, although sometimes
involving some cooperation and division of labour
40