Gangs and Youth Subcultures

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African American Gangs
Birmingham CCCS
Cameron Hazlehurst
Category=JBSP2
Chong Yun Steve
comparative criminology
Criminal Business
Diego Vigil James
Don Pinnock
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Fort Defiance
Gang Members
Girl Friend
Greater Vancouver Area
Ian Warren
Incarcerated Gang Members
international youth gang prevention
James W. Zion
Joachim Kersten
Judith Bessant
Julie A. Hailer
Kayleen M. Hazlehurst
Los Diablos
Los Panchos
Maori Kaupapa
Mara Douglas-Hamilton
Marianne O. Nielsen
Megan Aumair
Mob Members
Multiple Marginality
Navajo Nation
NCD
NGO Youth
Paddy Rawlinson
Pahmi Winter
Port Moresby
qualitative ethnography
Rob Watts
Robert M. Gordon
Roger Burke
Ros Sunley
Sinclair Dinnen
social intervention strategies
Street Gang Activity
Street Gangs
Te Whaiti
transnational organized crime
urban violence research
Vietnamese Youth
Vietnamese Youth Gangs
Visible Ethnic Minorities
Young Men
youth deviance studies
Youth Subcultures

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560003632
  • Weight: 706g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Aug 1998
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Gangs are growing in many different social, economic, and political environments coupled with an alarming breakdown of public order. Failures to contain or reduce gang crime in European, Asian, South American, African, and North American cities may be symptoms of fundamental problems threatening the fabric of many societies. The spread of gangs to suburbia and remote locations is a palpable, worldwide threat. But despite nearly a century of scholarly inquiry into street gangs and youth subcultures, no single work systematically reflects on comparative international experiences with gangs.

Gangs and Youth Subcultures takes up this challenge. Kayleen Hazlehurst and Cameron Hazlehurst argue that theories of gang behavior in immigrant communities and the influence of transnational crime syndicates are better tested in more than one host society. Similar phenomena would be better understood if placed in a comparative context. To this purpose, the editors assembled expert scholars and policy advisers from North America, Europe, South Africa, and Australasia. Gangs and Youth Subculture lays the groundwork for an explanation of why gangs continue to grow in strength and influence, and why they have spread to remote locations.Kayleen Hazlehurst and Cameron Hazlehurst present new findings and innovative preventive strategies in a clear, concise fashion. No other work brings together experts on gangs and youth subcultures from so many countries. As such, this trailblazing book will interest scholars and teachers of criminology and sociology, justice system administrators, as well as law enforcement officers and youth workers internationally.

Cameron Hazlehurst is Honorary Professor in the Research School of Humanities and the Arts at The Australian National University. He was previously a Senior Fellow in the Institute of Advanced Studies at the Australian National University and a research fellow at The Queen’s College and Nuffield College, Oxford. He has held senior Commonwealth government appointments with the Departments of Urban and Regional Development, Communications, and Community Services and Health. He is author or editor of eight books on twentieth century British and Australian politics and history.

Kayleen M. Hazlehurst is Senior Lecturer in Cross-Cultural Studies in the School of Humanities, Queensland University of Technology. Trained in social anthropology at McGill and Toronto Universities (MA PhD), she has studied and worked with indigenous organisations and government agencies in Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. Her recent publications include Political Expression and Ethnicity (Praeger 1993), A Healing Place (CQUP1994), and edited volumes on Popular Justice and Community Regeneration (Praeger 1995), Legal Pluralism and the Colonial Legacy (Avebury 1995), and Perceptions of Justice (Avebury 1995). She is the editor of Crime and Justice: An Australian Textbook in Criminology (LBC1996).