|
Product Description
South Los Angeles is often seen as ground zero for inter-racial conflict and violence in the United States. Since the 1940s, South LA has been predominantly a low-income African American neighborhood, and yet since the early 1990s Latino immigrants—mostly from Mexico and many undocumented—have moved in record numbers to the area. Given that more than a quarter million people live in South LA and that poverty rates exceed 30 percent, inter-racial conflict and violence surprises no one. The real question is: why hasn't there been more? Through vivid stories and interviews, The Neighborhood Has Its Own Rules provides an answer to this question.
Based on in-depth ethnographic field work collected when the author, Cid Martinez, lived and worked in schools in South Central, this study reveals the day-to-day ways in which vibrant social institutions in South LA— its churches, its local politicians, and even its gangs—have reduced conflict and kept violence to a level that is manageable for its residents. Martinez argues that inter-racial conflict has not been managed through any coalition between different groups, but rather that these institutions have allowed established African Americans and newcomer Latinos to co-exist through avoidance—an under-appreciated strategy for managing conflict that plays a crucial role in America's low-income communities. Ultimately, this book proposes a different understanding of how neighborhood institutions are able to mitigate conflict and violence through several community dimensions of informal social controls.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Social Stratification: Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective
- Caught Up (Gender and Justice)
- Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys (New Perspectives in Crime, Deviance, and Law)
- Juvenile Delinquency (9th Edition)
- Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison
- Between Good and Ghetto: African American Girls and Inner-City Violence (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)
- Human Targets: Schools, Police, and the Criminalization of Latino Youth
- The Age of Lone Wolf Terrorism (Studies in Transgression)
- From Deportation to Prison: The Politics of Immigration Enforcement in Post-Civil Rights America (Latina/o Sociology)
- The Evolution of the Juvenile Court: Race, Politics, and the Criminalizing of Juvenile Justice (Youth, Crime, and Justice)
*If this is not the "The Neighborhood Has Its Own Rules: Latinos and African Americans in South Los Angeles" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 23, 2024 02:49 +08.