
In 2009, Chicago spent millions of dollars to create programs to prevent gang violence in some of its most disadvantaged neighborhoods. Yet in spite of the programs, violence has grown worse in some of the very neighborhoods that the violence prevention programs were intented to help. While public officials and social scientists often attribute the violence - and the failure of the programs - to a lack of community in poor neighborhoods, closer study reveals another source of community division: local politics.Through an ethnographic case study of Chicago's Little Village neighborhood, Wounded City dispells the popular belief that a lack of community is the primary source of violence, arguing that competition for political power and state resources often undermine efforts to reduce gang violence. Robert Vargas argues that the state, through the way it governs, can contribute to distrust and division among community members, thereby undermining social cohesion. The strategic actions taken by police officers, politicians, nonprofit organizations, and gangs to collaborate or compete for power and resources can vary block by block, triggering violence on some blocks while successfully preventing it on others.A rich blend of urban politics, sociology, and criminology, Wounded City offers a cautionary tale for elected officials, state agencies, and community based organizations involved with poor neighborhoods.
This book investigates why state-sponsored violence prevention programs in Chicago failed to reduce gang activity, identifying local political competition as the primary driver of community division. Robert Vargas, a sociologist, utilizes extensive ethnographic research conducted in the Little Village neighborhood to challenge the prevailing academic and political narrative that blames violence on a lack of community cohesion. He argues that the state's own governance structures and the competition for resources among local actors create the very instability these programs aim to solve.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in urban sociology and criminology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of state-community relations. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the ethnographic data and the clarity with which the author challenges established public policy assumptions.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2016-05-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190245913
ISBN-13:
9780190245917
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