SOLUTIONS
The most fruitful
strategies for dealing with gangs are those which emphasize prevention
and intervention instead of suppression and enforcement--on this most
social scientists and criminologists agree (Goldstein and Huffl993)
(Conley 1993) (Winfree, Mays & Vigil-Backstrom 1994) (Father Boyle
l996).
The fortress mentality doesn't work. In l992, just two
hours before New York's Mayor Dinkins was to address a high school
student body, another student shot and killed two classmates. At the
time of the shootings, there were seventeen police officers in the
building not to mention other security personnel and measures taken
especially since the mayor was on the grounds! (Shields 1993:8)
Neither stepped up police surveillance nor short-term
incarceration does much good. If anything, incarceration gives the
individual prestige among peers. The publicity that gang violence
generates satisfies the adolescent hunger for recognition. "Kids
like to have their names in the paper, even if someone is
killed..." said one youngster to the Boston Globe. Others boast
about the things they have done and like to portray themselves as public
enemy number one. Ironically, treating gangs like public enemies may
encourage gang membership because of the widespread publicity and
notoriety furnished by that sort of reaction.
The gang phenomenon, according to both the liberal
apologists and anti-gang activists, is a by-product of moral breakdown
in the community. While the apologists tell us that it is the conditions
that drive young people to crime, not all youths from these conditions
join gangs--a much overlooked, but salient point to remember. As a mater
of fact, the majority do not affiliate with gangs, and only some 4 to 10
% do.
Thus, prosecution must be directed at the crime, not the
social group. A war on gangs hurts the working poor who live in the
neighborhood and are humiliated and harassed by it. Furthermore, it
arouses people's outrage and further prejudices society against them.
Of course, issues of race cannot be ignored in
looking for solutions to the gang problem. Clearly, difficult conditions
are relegated to certain races and not others in our society.
If "tough on crime" measures fail, perhaps society's resources
must be realigned in a way that respects the humanity of all people, and
that addresses the inequities that give rise to violence. Until society
realizes that every child has value and that every child can succeed,
the youth in the lower socio economic areas will continue to be a lost
resource. The first step, then, becomes one of supporting young people
who are trying (the other 90 plus percent who live in these destructive
environments).

Probably most important is acknowledging that individual moral
responsibility is a necessary pre-condition to the resolution of the
gang problem. Some of the parents do not themselves have the moral
wherewithal to instruct their children away from gang membership (See
Why Join and Criminal Behavior).
COMPULSORY EDUCATION PAST THE AGE OF 14
Perhaps teens who don't want to be in school should not be there. Why
not have schools for those who want to learn? Those who want to be in
gangs need to be dealt with differently, but not in our schools where
they poison the well for everyone else.
Schools for youths who want to learn might also dry up the sources of
recruitment for gangs. School ranks high among those who instill young
people with contempt for education if schools are irrelevant and
unchanallenging. School is also where we learn what constitutes a
"book-worm." Clearly, young people's attitudes are subsidized
after school as well and in the community, on MTV
and even in department stores that have made not only gang attire
"trendy," but have recently made the "junkie" look
popular too. Hence, between videos, rap feuding, songs about the drug
culture, bad boy entertainment, and gang clothing, kids are inundated
with the opposite value system of that which the mainstream society
purportedly would have them learn.
Along this line of thinking, at a Kansas City gang summit the
recommendation that African-American parents develop their own separate
school system actually garnered support according to Ralph Reiland,
Prof. at Robert Morris College. Reiland maintains that the African
American Community at large is too focused on what injustices have been
or are currently being done to them.
He attacks the "It's not fair" mentality, and charges
that it has made people contemptuous of business. Hence, he recommends
capitalism for Black America. Reiland would create hope through
capitalism by opening stores, generating jobs, and supplying examples of
success (Reiland 1994). This may not be bad advice for the Latino
community as well, a community that has also wallowed in victimization
moaning about repression for much too long.
While the schools try to draw the students, and while the parents
advocate education, anti-intellectualism is often unintentionally
fostered at home as well as throughout the society. Frequently in the
lower socio-economic household, there is a good deal of animosity
towards college graduates who are unable to assemble a push broom down
at the plant where mom and dad work--overlooking, of course, the fact
that with education, one doesn't have to deal with push brooms very
often if at all!. Latino college people are berated and described as
individuals who act like big-shots, know it-alls, who are "agabachado"
and trying to be Anglo-like. In addition, it is also not
"cool" to be studious.
Other forms of anti-intellectualism are more subtle, although
prevalent throughout the society. They are expressed by sports heroes --
many of whom behave like hoodlums themselves --i.e. the wife beaters,
drug abusers, etc. Instead, "cool" is cutting classes and not
doing homework.
Health professionals working with mental disorders have suggested a
mandate for special education programs to find methods of teaching and
counseling antisocial students (Lewis 1992). If a special environment
for peer approval and recognition is needed, something that offers
identity and status, perhaps it should be separate from the classroom
environment of those students who want to go to school to learn and
behave normally.
SOLUTIONS OFFERED FROM CO3GA ORGANIZATIONS
ACROSS THE COUNTRY
CHICAGO: From the Chicago suburb of
Cicero, one of the more resourceful strategies to stem the spread of
gang-related violence, grew out of an Illinois law that allowed
officials to treat street gangs as unincorporated associations. Thus,
officials filed suit against 14 street gangs with the intent of
recovering nearly $200,000 that had been spent by the city on cleaning
up graffiti and related vandalism committed by gangs. (Ponessa 1993:
18-19)
CALIFORNIA: One pilot program brought
"at risk" youths to the morgue so that they might be
disinclined to join gangs (Ponessa, 1993).
PROJECT SUPPORT: LAUSD (Los Angeles
Unified School District) A prevention program directed at elementary
students in six inner city schools, included drug/gang policy awareness,
drug and gang prevention education, racial and cultural sensitivity
development, after school alternative programs, tutoring and mentoring,
community service opportunities for kids, career awareness instruction,
and parent education. Many programs go under (as was the case with this
one) because of delays in both funding and budgetary approvals for
subcontracts providing services to the various schools (Slovak 1993).
Programs like this can be greatly assisted by parents who might
contribute a bit of time and energy for free. After all, it might very
well be they who need the programs most for their own youngsters,
themselves, or their neighborhood.
THE PACT PROGRAM: In this program (PACT)
Parents and Children Together aimed at early intervention by increasing
parental responsibility, involvement, commitment, and awareness. The
program insisted that the nucleus of the problem centered in family
background and social characteristics and that these predisposed a youth
to gang membership. These tactics work well "before" a youth
joins a gang, but they are not a good "after" approach. Once
adolescents are in gangs, different strategies are needed. Most research
indicates the need for building juvenile self-esteem (Sloan l993).
INTERVENTIONS: Other intervention
strategies have a few characteristics in common. Most suggest targeting
which adolescents are most vulnerable. The also advise early peer
counseling and support group session. Conflict resolution programs seem
to work well. Establishing tutoring schedules permits young people to
experience success in school for a change. This, in turn, empowers young
people and boosts self-esteem. Other interventions provide moral and
ethical counseling. Some have values clarification sessions. All
struggle to make the targeted youths feel appreciated and valued. Most
try to bring parents, extended family, and any significant others into
the plan and try to get them as far away as possible from the influence
of gang youths not enrolled in the school.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: The Anaheim City
Council appointed an ad hoc task force and initiated project
Save-A-Youth which was a partnership between city, YMCA, Parks &
Recreation, and parents. It blended individual counseling with crisis
intervention and education programs for parents and youths. A
distinctive feature of this undertaking was the "street
school" which offered genuine encouragement and gave drop-outs an
opportunity to really do something about returning to mainstream
classrooms (Willis Kistler: 1988,46).
Programs die out after a while primarily because the principal
players move, burn out, or are unsupported by the rest of the community.
Funding, of course, is a tremendous problem although many programs have
continued long after funds ran dry supported only by the donated time
and efforts of those die-hards who remain interested in rescuing the
communities' neglected children.
DARE. Los Angeles (Drug Abuse Resistance
Education) in l983 the Los Angeles Police Department along with the Los
Angeles Unified School District developed the DARE program for
adolescents in the fifth, sixth and seventh grades. The objective was to
assist youths in foiling peer pressure by saying "No" to
alcohol and other drugs. DARE has had its successes as well as its
failures, and has been used as a preventative model across the country.
However, it over simplies. It certainly underestimates the complexities
of the task involved in just saying "no," which would probably
get a youth's nose bloodied at the very least, if not utterly smashed
beyond repair even by the most masterful reconstructive surgeons. The
ethos of the streets calls for a far more circuitous technique than to
simply blurt out "No." (See student essays under
"Non-Gang Affiliated: Essay excerpts" and under" Why
join? How do Non gang Affiliated Survive: More Case Study Essays"
to see how young people manage to live in these neighborhoods without
affiliating or using).
JEOPARDY: Los Angeles. Many of the
troubled teens these days are sincerely looking for alternatives to gang
activity. Frequently, however, there is no other way out of the abject
rejection, poverty, and disdain they face from day to day. Hence, in
l988 LAPPD established "Jeopardy" designed to redirect young
people at high risk. It addressed adolescents who fell into the "wanna
be" category and other peripherals including younger siblings of
gang members. School officials, parents and community organizations or
businesses, seeks to balance the odds that youths in a gang dominated
neighborhood will join a gang.
CHURCHES AND CITIZENS GROUPS:
These groups are doing a great deal in prevention as well as in the area
of intervention. Some of the citizens groups have come up with the most
creative and colorful solutions yet. Clearly, there is no single
solution to the gang problem because not only are there individual
differences to deal with, but also regional and geographical differences
too.
TACOMA, WASHINGTON: When the number of
gang members in the Tacoma, Washington area surpassed 500 known gang
members, the community took the "war" approach consisting of
the following measures: gang members were not allowed to liter or to sit
on the hoods of their cars; they were stopped if they were drinking beer
in public, if they were driving without seat belts, and for even slight
infractions as part of a general harassment approach. Police saturated
the area if they heard of a planned gang event. The community and even
the military began to exchange information about gang activities. This
kind of mobilization sends the message that gangs are not welcome.
Meetings and briefings with local parents and team commanders were held
frequently. The DARE program approach was implemented as well.
PRIDE (Parents Resource Institute for
Drug Education) was developed at the prompting of Congressman Rob
Portman (R-Ohio) as part of the Coalition For A Drug-Free Greater
Cincinnati which, according to some, could be a model for anti-drug
activity anywhere in the country (Forbes, 1996). The group involves
parents, religious and business leaders from the community, and the
media, all of whom use forums of various types to drive the anti-drug
message home. The underlying premise in this program is a good one:
everyone must get involved because--"If you want a drug-free
community, you must begin with the areas you personally can
control--your homes, streets, neighborhoods, and schools,"
according to Walter Williams, a specialist in community anti-drug
efforts (Forbes 1996).
COMMUNITY BASED POLICING A new style of
policing, criticized by some as soft on crime, but praised by others, is
the old-fashioned concept of a police officer on a beat who gets to know
the merchants and folks in the neighborhood. There are various types of
patrols in place in "Community Based Policing;" for example,
officers on horse back, on bikes, and on foot beats work throughout an
area. Generally, such programs have Police Advisory Boards composed of
community residents who work with the Captain of that area or with the
"Senior Lead Officer" as they are sometimes called. Because
these are area Captains, their purpose is to achieve a territorial
imperative for each area. (McDonald 1996)
CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS: The Douglas Center,
an unofficially neutral zone, with coach Walter Smith and his teams has
been successful in an area that is about 75 to 85% gang affiliated
youths. In the midst of this, Walter Smith has diligently plodded along
giving the gangs tremendous competition (Orr 1995:28). The Walter Smith
teams played football, basketball, etc. It made no difference if a teen
was a Vice Lord or a Gangster Disciple. A youth could go to the Center
and play ball for a while, so long as no one caused any trouble. A no
nonsense attitude from coach Smith made that point all too clear.
Traveling was one of the most memorable parts of being on one of Coach
Smith's teams. And camping at the end of their season was another much
appreciated perk. The program was funded, although very marginally, by
the Park District as well as by private collections and fund raising
drives.
Champaign Community Policing Units have been
successful in the area as well.
CRASH: In the early l970's, CRASH was a
specially trained police unit taking the traditional approach of waging
war on the gang problem. The approach means putting a lot of gang
members in jail thereby creating enormous pressure on their very
existence. Hindsight has confirmed that this approach hardly makes a
dent. Today, Gates and Jackson, who helped establish the l970's effort,
themselves support multiple strategies. While the presence of police at
every turn does drive the dope dealers from the streets and frightens
off a few gang members and other unsavory characters for the time being,
the long term effects are negligible. Nevertheless, Los Angeles
resurrects CRASH units from time to time whether or not they function
productively in the long run.
AURORA GANG INTERVENTION UNIT --
This unit's underlying approach is to let gangs know they are being
identified. Thus, if a gang commits a crime, they are going to get
caught--that's the word out on the street (Barrow 1991). Actually, this
is the purpose behind a number of community outreach programs. They meet
with parents and merchants and form a coalition; a viable method of
reporting crime or any suspicious activity is devised. The Aurora Gang
Intervention Unit sought to get a grasp of the real problem and get away
from the fascination with gangs that is distracting us from the
"need to develop effective coordinated strategies for preventing
and combating crime" (Clay & Aquila, 1994: 68) The fascination
referred to here is the sensational such as how may gang members a girl
has to have sex with in order to join. Instead Clay and Aquila advocate
treating gangs as a symptom of underlying community problems, not as the
problem in and of themselves.
MENTORING PROGRAMS: Part of the
frustration experienced by adolescents who join gangs is that their
academic skills are usually way below par. Thus, mentoring programs --
peer tutoring - kids helping other kids, is one inexpensive way of
serving youngsters and helping them raise their confidence in
themselves.
GREAT (Gang Reporting Evaluation
and Tracking) is a computerized information resource of gang activity
that runs on a software program called Prime Information from Prime
Computer Inc. of Natick, Mass. GREAT targeted 5th and 6th graders at
Fort Lewis, Washington according to an article, "Fort Lewis Says
No." Here the DARE program focused on "gateway drugs"
tobacco, alcohol and marijuana, with GREAT, on the other hand,
addressing crime, violence and teaching youths how to resist pressures
to join gangs. Military police administered the program which greatly
added to the credibility of lectures on firearms (SFC Douglas Ide 1995).
COMMUNITY RECREATION: There is no
way the police or community recreation center can compete with the sense
of belonging that the gang subculture offers. It certainly cannot
replace the money to be had by selling drugs with the gang either
(McBride & Jackson 1989:31). Technological tools like GREAT help,
but here again the effort is to stamp out, intervene and arrest. The
real solutions lie outside the realm of the police--in the community,
and primarily in the home. "Kids need alternative to gangs and some
positive adult leadership," as well as a place to "hang
out" said Dick Tillson a CYA official (California Youth Authority).
Principals, parents and teens must all take part in prevention programs.
Instead of spending on prevention, schools are spending on metal
detectors and school safety plans. Richard Katz, Assembly Democrat from
Sylmar in Los Angeles County is the author of a bill to set up metal
detectors in most Los Angeles schools. Dan Lungren would close the
school so students could not leave during the day for lunch; he would
also have us increase security guards, discouraging outsiders from
loitering near the school. (Barber 1993)
Politicians, law enforcement and school administrators are targeting
younger children nowadays, teaching them self-esteem and communication
skills as well as where to get help. Focusing on student behavior is far
more productive than targeting style of clothing (Hethhorn 1994) or
using "get tough" approaches.
Although suppression is the strategy most frequently used, it
generally fails in reducing or in controlling juvenile crime, if used by
itself with no intervention or follow up program. (tape # 258-93
Pannell)
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS AND MENTAL HEALTH:
According to Beverly Lewis, a mandate for special education programs and
mental health professionals is warranted in dealing with the gang
problem considering the dimensions to which it has grown. The need is to
uncover methods of teaching and counseling antisocial students. She
notes that the number of gang members who present problems in a
community would certainly meet clinical criteria for identification as
"conduct disordered." Thus, the problem is seen as a treatment
issue here (Lewis 1992)--an interesting and no so far-fetched idea.
MENTAL PROGRAMS HEALTH PROFESSIONALS:
Belitz and Valdea claim there is very little literature with clinical
information on the "assessment and treatment of Chicano
gang-involved youth." They advocate addressing family and cultural
identity factors. Mental health professionals are needed to work with
and to advocate for the needs of Chicano Gang involved young people in
both mental health and correctional settings. (1994)
A SUMMARY OF TYPES OF PROGRAMS:
Strategies with differing degrees of success include community
mobilization using a number of resources from the area, social
intervention which involves counseling and tutoring and a number of
other assists, providing opportunities within the community such as job
assistance and recreational programs, and suppression--the
"war" model (Silverman: 1994) Basically, most strategies are
an adaptation of one of these basic approaches.
Although there is little empirical data available, a pattern emerges
indicating that successful programs have the following things in common
:
1. Many sponsors both public and private
2. Involvement of police and community service agencies
3. Reaching out to at-risk youths
4. Providing a variety of services such as counseling, positive life
experiences and goals (See Silverman l994).
WAYS OUT OF A GANG: One of the best
ways out of the gang is to have "an ol'lady and a kid." In the
current study, males with both were left alone and not expected to
participate in many gang activities. Others seem to outgrow the gang by
age 24, 25 or so. Those who continue membership in such groups beyond
their adolescent years are generally thought to have made the transition
from being gang members to being what might be called independent
criminals with gang affiliations (Berland, Homlish and Blotcky 1989:39)
Others find it very difficult to leave or to be left alone. Two
youths in the current study reported having brothers who moved away from
the area completely in order to get out. Those who want to exit often
find jobs and simply fade away into the work world. Those who are not
employable in any capacity because of long police records do not do so
well. Others find themselves constantly pulled back by the gang and
unable to exit. Getting out is not as easy as getting in for many.
But a pattern that emerges in the current study over and over again
is that most gang members will outgrow their gang involvement, provided
of course they live that long.
A small percentage of hardcore members will go on to adult prison
gangs -- i.e. Nuestra Familia --but most move into some range on a broad
spectrum of adult life. Research shows that young people often leave the
gang because of the influence of a girl friend, parent or other adult (Spergel
1990:100). There simply comes a time when the gang member is ready to
move on. Of course, the best solution is to get to the pee-wees and end
recruitment- nipping the problem at the bud.
Actually, the prognosis for gang members is better than for other
criminal defendants, because many will simply outgrow their criminality
particularly if they get any kind of job skills, remedial education and
emotional support along the way providing them with self-esteem, or with
someone who cares about them (often a girlfriend fits the bill).
Imprisonment inevitably leads to prison gang membership. The
California Youth Authority estimates that four out of every five inmates
become affiliated with a gang. (Haddock & Ginsburg At A 1, Col
2A-14, Col 2)
PUNISH THE PARENTS: California
has not yet gone so far as have authorities in some states (Burrell
1990). In one Arkansas town, an ordinance was passed permitting the
jailing and public humiliation of parents whose children violated
curfew..." (Burrell 1990). Thus one solution is to have
consequences for parents (when there are parents visible). Getting the
message out that gangs create problems for parents of adolescents may
make gang membership less appealing (and may especially be useful in a
Latino community where the family is still somewhat important).
Arresting gang leaders doesn't do much good. But drying up the sources
of recruitment is toxic to the perpetuation of the gang. The long-term
survival of a youth gang, depends on its ability to attract new members
(Decker & Van Winkle p.170)
AVOID A CRITICAL MASS: Something
other than the threat of expulsion is needed. Thrasher recommended
providing an atmosphere of excitement and thrills through camping,
mountain climbing, canoeing, etc. Corny as it may seem, in the current
study some of the best loved teachers mentioned by the gang members were
those who had taken them camping in the early grades (Kindergarten
through 6th).
CYGS (Community Youth Gang
Services) offers direct services to neighborhoods awarding actual
intervention and mediation of gang conflict, providing preventive
educational programs, setting up partnerships with community groups and
businesses aimed at reducing gang activity and even furnishing
employment programs.
Funding for this kind of work is, of course, an ongoing problem. The
rest of society certainly doesn't want to pay for it. Sometimes because
Latino and Black gang activity is largely directed at their own ethnic
groups within their own neighborhoods, the rest of the society presumes
that they need not concern themselves. However, our system of
governments maintains that all residents of the U. S. are entitled to
protection regardless of color and ethnicity. History demonstrates that
all "... criminal groups in the U. S., whatever their ethnic
origin, eventually extend their corrupting tentacles to the larger
community as they seek more power, influence and money" (U.S.
Senate 1991:5 quoted in Karen A. Joe: 1995:8). Gangs, therefore, are
decisively everyone's problems.
DE-EMPHASIZE THE NEGATIVE, ACCENTUATE THE
POSITIVE: The current L. A. Police Chief, Williams, has said
repeatedly during a number of public appearances that what we have done
the last 20 years has not worked. He adds that children long for someone
to accept them, love and praise them. They need approval. Police Chief
Williams suggests that we tell them that they will achieve, and not that
they will fail.