Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Gangs and Society

The Oxford Handbook of Gangs and Society

262,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.02.2024

Herausgeber

Pyrooz David C. + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

920

Maße (L/B/H)

25,5/17,7/6,2 cm

Gewicht

1633 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-761815-8

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.02.2024

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

920

Maße (L/B/H)

25,5/17,7/6,2 cm

Gewicht

1633 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-761815-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: GPSR Kontakt

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  • Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Gangs and Society
    • 1. Introduction to the OUP Handbook of Gangs and Society

    • David C. Pyrooz, James A. Densley, and John Leverso

    • Section 1: Revisiting Definitions in the 21st Century

    • 2. The Eurogang definition: Context, development, scrutiny, and debate (including a conversation with Malcolm Klein)

    • Frank Weerman and Scott Decker

    • 3. What gangs aren't: Contrasting gangs with other collectives

    • Martin Bouchard, Karine Descormiers, and Alysha Girn

    • 4. A relational approach to street gangs

    • Andrew V. Papachristos, John Leverso, and David Hureau

    • 5. Gangs in practice: Violence prevention, law enforcement, and the received idea of the “gang”

    • David Kennedy

    • 6. The social construction of the American street gang

    • Patrick Lopez-Aguado

    • 7. Gang identity across the life course

    • Sou Lee and Bryan F. Bubolz

    • 8. Place matters: Geographers and gang members

    • Stefano Bloch

    • Section 2: Approaches to the Empirical Study of Gangs

    • 9. The history and evolution of gang scholarship: A topic modeling and change point detection approach

    • Jason Gravel

    • 10. Funding gang research to advance policy and practice

    • Phelan A. Wyrick, Barbara Tatem Kelley, and Mary Poulin Carlton

    • 11. The National Youth Gang Survey: Past, present, and future

    • Meagan Cahill, James C. Howell, and Arlen Egley Jr.

    • 12. Historical gang research methods: An overview

    • Mitchel Roth

    • 13. Critical approaches to gangs

    • Tilman Schwarze and Alistair Fraser

    • 14. Women in gang research: An overview

    • Marta-Marika Urbanik and Sandra M. Bucerius

    • 15. Indigenous gangs and gang research

    • Adrienne Freng and Hannah St. Clair

    • 16. Studying gangs in Central and South America: Reflections on gender and researcher positionality

    • María José Méndez and Ellen Van Damme

    • 17. Gang research in the Caribbean

    • Edward R. Maguire

    • Section 3: Core and Emerging Issues

    • 18. What is gang culture? Three conceptualizations of an elusive concept

    • Caylin Louis Moore and Forrest Stuart

    • 19. Masculinities and respect in the group context of gangs

    • Lorine A. Hughes and Lisa M. Broidy

    • 20. Birds of a feather? Individual differences and gang membership

    • Jennifer J. Tostlebe and Jose Antonio Sanchez

    • 21. Rational choice, gang membership, and crime: Moving actors and choice to center stage

    • Kyle J. Thomas

    • 22. Psychopathology as a cause or consequence of youth gang involvement

    • Patricia K. Kerig, Lucybel Mendez, Ava Alexander, and Susan Chen

    • 23. The emerging frontier: Gangs in developing countries

    • Herbert C. Covey

    • 24. Gang ecological diversity in the Hollenbeck area of Los Angeles, 1978-2012

    • P. Jeffrey Brantingham and Matthew Valasik

    • Section 4: Gangs in Institutional Context

    • 25. Storming the capital: The place of street capital and social capital within gangs

    • Simon Harding and Ross Deuchar

    • 26. On gangs and family: Primary, secondary, and surrogate family

    • Gabriel T. Cesar, D'Andre Walker, and Tiffany Fernandez

    • 27. Linking education and criminology research to understand the schooling experiences of gang youth and adults

    • Adrian H. Huerta

    • 28. Religion and gangs: An introduction to the isolated and integrated affiliation models

    • Timothy R. Lauger and Haleigh Kubiniec

    • 29. Re-examining the literature on social media and gangs: Critical race theory as a path for new opportunities

    • Caitlin Elsaesser and Desmond Patton

    • 30. Comparative approaches to the study of prison gangs and prison order

    • David Skarbek and Kaitlyn Woltz

    • 31. Transnational gangs? Understanding migration and gangs

    • José Miguel Cruz and Jonathan D. Rosen

    • Section 5: Legacies of Second-Generation Researchers

    • 32. The legacy of Scott H. Decker

    • David C. Pyrooz and Richard K. Moule Jr.

    • 33. The legacy of Finn-Aage Esbensen

    • Dena C. Carson, Adrienne Freng, Chris Melde, and Dana Peterson

    • 34. The legacy of John M. Hagedorn

    • Roberto R. Aspholm

    • 35. The legacy of Cheryl L. Maxson

    • Shannon E. Reid

    • 36. The legacy of Joan W. Moore

    • James Diego Vigil

    • 37. The legacy of James Diego Vigil

    • Mike Tapia and E. Mark Moreno

    • Section 6: Responding to Gangs

    • 38. Clinical intervention for gang-involved youth: Toward an empirically validated model

    • Paul Boxer, Joanna Kubik, and Stephanie Marcello

    • 39. No public benefit: The Placentia gang injunction opposition campaign

    • Sean Garcia-Leys and Jesse Engel

    • 40. “Somebody's watching me:” Surveying police surveillance of gangs

    • Matthew Valasik and P. Jeffrey Brantingham

    • 41. Policing gangs: Five reasons why traditional strategies fail

    • Madeleine Novich

    • 42. Defund the police? Considerations for reducing gang violence

    • Anthony A. Braga, John M. MacDonald, and George Tita

    • 43. Making sense of the models: Continuities and differences across prominent gang/group gun violence intervention models

    • Jesse Jannetta, Paige S. Thompson, and Lily Robin