Gang Membership Essay

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This dissertation is concerned with notions of membership and aims to explore the sociological interest of why individuals belong to certain groups over others, the boundaries between those groups and how they are manifested, with a specific focus on gang membership. This literature review will engage with key themes in the literature on gangs, as well as concepts around identity and belonging, the body and symbols since these are important issues around gang membership. This piece of work aims to be both interesting and innovative by combining discrete areas of knowledge that aren’t typically considered together and utilising visual methods – despite the multiple issues – in connection to group membership as a way of exploring those bodily …show more content…

Gangs emerged throughout the 19th century in the transitional neighbourhoods of large cities in the U.S such as Chicago, as well as those in the industrial Midwest and the Northeast (Huff 1996; Sante 1991). Thrasher (1927) carried out a landmark study of 1,313 Chicago gangs, making him one of the pioneering academics on gang research, and following him were other academics such as Cohen (1955), Yablonsky (1959, 1990, 1997), Klein (1971, 1995), Decker and Van Winkle (1996) and Phelan and Hunt (1998). Gangs have typically been researched through empirical studies and investigative literature reports, and throughout the 1980s and 1990s important research into gangs occurred in the United States and elsewhere (Hughes and Short 2009). However, ‘recent scholarly attention has become stagnant, lacking fresh insight and the intellectual spirit out of which it was born’ (Hughes and Short 2009: 694). Therefore this dissertation aims to provide fresh insight into the study of gangs, specifically concerning group membership and how belonging to gangs is displayed through bodily inscriptions, behaviours and …show more content…

Until the 1970s ‘the term gang was synonymous with the large urban centres of New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and LA’ (Fagan 1996: 40). However, since then, gang research has identified that there has been a rapid increase in the number of gangs in the U.S and across the globe (Klein 1995; Decker and Weerman 2005). 'Heterogeneity between and within gangs has been evident in gang research for over 75 years' (Fagan 1996: 42), yet evidence suggests that gangs have probably been even more diverse than previously portrayed; scholarly attention is uncovering increased diversity along more dimensions than has been suggested by earlier studies (Huff 1996). The U.S is more ethnically and racially diverse than previously and gangs today reflect this. Findings suggest that alongside the emergence of Asian gangs, white gangs have been declining (except in smaller cities in the U.S) and gang members are now mainly of African-American or Hispanic lineage (Sanders 1994; Klein 1995; Spergel

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