As the semester has gone on and I have started to learn more about gang culture this question has become harder to answer. If you would of asked me this 4 weeks ago, I would of told you that without a doubt joining a gang is 100% by choice. That no one forces you to do something besides you. But as I have gotten to see overtime, other factors of life go into this decision. And that sometimes you might be swayed towards the gang life because life has dealt you a hand that has made it feel impossible not to. With that said majority of myself still feels that yes joining a gang is in fact by choice. In chapter 2 of our assigned reading, J.T. had his life on the straight and narrow. He graduated college and took a job that didn’t pay much but was …show more content…
And the statistics don’t lie either. If someone lives in a gang neighborhood or where gang activity is prevelant, than the likelihood of them joining is much higher. And as we have seen over the semester, kids who grow up in gang neighborhoods tend to stay and join because of many reasons. Some being they want that flashy lifestyle, some do it to provide for their family and some simply do so for protection. However I still truly believe after all that I have just said it is still a choice. That no one is pointing a gun to your head and forcing you too. The reason there is a higher percentage of people getting into gangs in gang neihborhoods is because it is the way of life around there. People tend to follow crowds. When they see it constantly many times they will end up doing it too. And I understand the argument that people are a product of their environment. However, I know many stories of people who grow up in the projects getting out and making something of themselves. For example Barak Obama, our president, grew up on the south side of chigago. This is arguably the most dangerous place in America. And yet he got out, went to law school and look at him now. All I am trying to convey is that if you want to make something of yourself its possible. That the excuse of “it’s all I’ve ever
Initially gang activity could only be found in large metropolitan cities, but now gangs have invaded neighborhoods of all sizes across the country. Gangs introduce violence and fear to the communities they occupy, raise the level of drug activities, and destroy businesses and property which brings down the overall value of the whole area. Instead of going to school, many young people find themselves drawn in to the gang life which in most cases either leads to being locked up or death. There are various reasons why people would want to join a gang, but no matter what that reason might be one can only expect a life of violence and troubles.
Gangs originated naturally during the adolescent years of a child. They started from small play groups that eventually found themselves in conflict with other small groups of youth. Due to the conflict between the two small groups of youth it became a part of a child’s mind set to come together as a gang and protect their rights and satisfy the needs that their environment and families couldn’t provide. There are about 24,500 gangs in the U.S and out of those gangs 40% of them are juveniles (Hess, Orthmann, Wright, 2013). There are numerous reason why a child would join a gang, and the
What influences youth to join and leave gangs in America? This essay strives to seek and inquire an answer or explanation to this question. I will try to approach the answer to this question by analyzing the biggest factors of it such as the influence of social institutions, psychological behaviour, media and many more to determine the push and pull factors of a gang. Understanding that the dynamics of gang membership can be separated into formation & joining which will allow theories & methods of gang-related research to be refined.
Furthermore, the book, Youth Gangs in American Society by Randall Shelden, Sharon Tracy, and William Brown (2013) discusses several theories about why people join gangs. One theory that I think especially fits the explanation as to why people join gangs, with regards to this book, is the control/social bond theory. Shelden et al define control/social bong theory as “when a youth’s, bonds or ties, to society are weak or broken, especially with family, school and other institutions, when this occurs, a youth is apt to seek bonds with other groups, including gangs, in order to get his or her needs met”(p 193). I think so many groups in society let this boy down in My Bloody Life, including his family, the school system and even the police. Consequently with his ties to society so weak, he reached out to a gang that gave him a sense of comfort and belonging.
This is a ‘touchy’ subject to most, as most people who live in an urban setting know someone either initiated into a gang or affiliated with a gang in one way or another. This is not a subject that is only skin deep. This is something that was created out of years of struggle and oppression, until the pressure years of social injustice found an outlet in the form of rebellion and organizations designed to fight the power that once suppressed them. At least that is how it began. Now the Gang mentality isn’t about protecting the community, it’s about power, local respect, fortune, and most of all fear. These are the same organizations that recruit children and adolescents to become drug dealers and
As the author of What’s It Like to be a Gang Member said, “I started in low-level gangs, stealing, peddling goods, getting into fights…” This quote shows that the people living that sort of life can start off small, doing smaller crimes, being in low-level gangs, but eventually, they will be deeper into gang business, and it will be harder for them to leave. They would end up in more trouble, and in a higher-level gang. He also mentions, “there was immense peer pressure to join in, whether you wanted to or not.” As you can see, it’s harder to escape that lifestyle because you keep on doing it more, and you won’t be able to choose if you
Many people are known to join gangs as a way to feel acceptance. In doing this there is a sense of belonging, and the belief that one’s well being will be cared about. And that if anything were to come up, help would be there if ever needed. Others join as a way for protection. Violence is becoming more of the American culture, and it is only becoming worse. High schools are a prime example of this. Students act out in violent fits of rage for questionable reasons. Rather than merely fight someone one-on one, they have their friends help them against their adversary. To many people this is considered cowardice, yet to them it is more of a form of protection. Not only that, it is a way to send a message that if one person is affected, everyone in the gang is affected. When each member is affected there is bound to be tragic
Data shows that in 1990, there were a total of 1.492 gang related homicides in a spam of only 408 cities; and from 1996-1998 there was approximately 1,204 homicides per year within 237 cities.What makes the youth so attracted to gang affiliations? Most theories have failed to target the reasons as to why individuals join gangs. However, there has been research that young adults whom join a gang, lack some of these five stages; physiological, personal safely, feeling love and “belonging”, low self-esteem, and self-actualization. When individuals join these gangs, “fulfill” all of these characteristics. Once associated, members receive shelter and food. In their eyes, gangs are viewed as sororities, where they know if anything happens to one of their members there will be protection from the others. With that being said, self-esteem and self-actualization naturally come about, bringing personal satisfaction. Most members are those with poor family network, low net-income, leading to devoting their time to the streets. Much of these has to do with the social network from these children and are often lured into these
Due to the misrepresentation of gangs on TV people have come to assumption that gangs are made up of a bunch of savages that look for violence when in reality most gang members are people just trying to get by. I believe that gangs exit in Chicago and around the United states because of the relationship between the government and education and the lack of government assistance toward certain communities. The government tends to spend less money on education in poverty stricken places when in fact they should be spending more money to help the community. I believe that the lack of government support is the reason many teens end up dropping out of school. In life, you must prioritize certain things, putting food on the table and supporting your family is far more important that going to high school and hoping you win the lottery just to afford college. People don’t join gangs because they love violence or because they want to look cool, almost all the time people join to support the people they love. Why not just get a normal job? Many people ask. In society, today you can’t get a decent job unless you go to college and graduate. Many people are not privileged enough to go to college or even high school so they end up joining gangs and selling drugs to support their family. For example, J.T was a very intelligent young man that had a bright future ahead of him after going to college on a sports
Gangs have existed in America since the early eighteenth century, they first rose a outsider institutions that provided membership and sense of self to individuals who were not seen as part of the community. Traditionally, gang membership correlates to familial membership; parental and family membership in a gang elevates the possibility of youth also joining a gang. Though these outsider institutions have developed overtime, they pose some of the most violent threats to public safety, but also to those they say they will protect. It is this violence and lifestyle dominated by power associated with gang memberships that create an appeal to black youth and change the course of their lives. Gangs are a creation of an ongoing cycle, in which society has failed to improve conditions for teens who are looking for new ways to belong in the community.
In order to become a member of a gang, most gangs typically have new members “put on” by being beaten up by a large number of older members of the gang. After this, the new member must commit a crime and earn his stripes, either by robbing someone, beating someone up, or in other cases, shooting and killing someone. All members must prove themselves (Howell, 1998). To an outsider, it might seem crazy that a kid would want to join a gang, but to a poor inner-city kid who has very little, gangs provide a family like relationship for kids who feel they are all alone. They provide protection and respect that allows a young person to walk through his or her neighborhood and stay unharmed (Howell, 1998).
There are a variety of traditional socioeconomic factors that have an impact on an individuals choice to join a gang. These factors include a shifting labor market, poverty, disfunctional family, no or poor education, development of an underclass, and the enticement of what being a gang member offers the individual. The gang may offer the individual security, acceptance, and help just surviving.
If a child is raised around that type of environment then they will feel more pressured or obligated into having to join a gang. Some children from broken homes might join a gang to get the sense of brotherhood and knowing someone else is there to have their back.
When was the last time you were able to turn on the news and not hear about some sort of violent act? Crime is a growing concern amongst most cities, and street gangs are behind a lot of the trouble. Street gangs have plagued the streets for centuries and there is no stopping the urge to commit such hideous crimes. Gangs grow from recruiting young kids but what makes a kid decide to join a crime filled lifestyle.
Instead they worry more about being accepted into the right crowds and owning lots of expensive items to show off. Most people fail to realize gang members are products of a bad environment that they are forced to live in. Immigrant families arrive with little money and have no choice but to live in bad neighborhoods. Society sees ghettos that are overfilled with immigrants and gangs so all low-class minority teens end up being stereotyped as being gangsters. The violence is not only on the streets but also at home. Often times, lower-class minority teens come from unstable homes. Immigrant parents no doubt already have a difficult time trying to make it in this prejudice society. With hard time the common cycle of poverty, drug and alcohol abuse, and sometime physical abuse arises. As a result teenager often rebel against their parents and find solace elsewhere. Because of the lack of love and guidance from parents, teens often stray from the family and wander blindly into the life of a gangbanger. Many of these ghetto troubled teens feel that they have nothin going for them so choosing this type of lifestyle is their way of getting through life and it is the only way they know to get through llife. Adolescence is the most crucial time to shape a young mind. When the world is against them during these times, many minority teens tend to easily stray from the right path and enter into the wrong crowd. Gangs have become a growing