NCJ Number
147810
Date Published
1984
Length
128 pages
Annotation
A historical perspective is presented on ethnic gangs in the United States, with focus on Hispanic gangs in Los Angeles City and County.
Abstract
The author draws upon literature and personal interviews with former and current gang members, employees of government agencies that deal with gang violence, and Hispanic ministers of religion. Two interviews are presented in their entirety. In Los Angeles, gangs spread from the disadvantaged central part of the city to every part of the county. By 1979, there were more than 300 gangs and 30,000 members, 80 percent of whom were Hispanic. From January to October 1984, gang violence in the county led to the deaths of 141 people--some of them innocent bystanders. This and previous research show the following commonalities in the phenomenon of Hispanic and other ethnic gangs: 1) Youths join gangs with the direct or tacit approval of their parents; 2) Youth are able to achieve a sense of identity, bravado, and respect by joining the neighborhood gang; 3) Identification with the gang continues generation after generation; 4) Gang members are willing to fight and die for their neighborhood; 5) Adolescents perceive the gang as the only support for their self-esteem; and 6) The gang thus plays the role of the family. 2 appendixes, sample questionnaires, 61 references