God's gangs : barrio ministry, masculinity, and gang recovery / Edward Orozco Flores.
2014
HV6439.U7 L725 2014 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
Items
Details
Title
God's gangs : barrio ministry, masculinity, and gang recovery / Edward Orozco Flores.
Author
ISBN
9781479878123 paperback
147987812X paperback
9781479850099 hardcover
1479850098 hardcover
147987812X paperback
9781479850099 hardcover
1479850098 hardcover
Published
New York : New York University Press, [2014]
Copyright
©2014
Language
English
Description
xiii, 230 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Call Number
HV6439.U7 L725 2014
Dewey Decimal Classification
261.8/3310660979494
Summary
"Los Angeles is the epicenter of the American gang problem. Rituals and customs from Los Angeles' eastside gangs, including hand signals, graffiti, and clothing styles, have spread to small towns and big cities alike. Many see the problem with gangs as related to urban marginality--for a Latino immigrant population struggling with poverty and social integration, gangs offer a close-knit community. Yet, as Edward Orozco Flores argues in God's Gangs, gang members can be successfully redirected out of gangs through efforts that change the context in which they find themselves, as well as their notions of what it means to be a man. Flores here illuminates how Latino men recover from gang life through involvement in urban, faith-based organizations. Drawing on participant observation and interviews with Homeboy Industries, a Jesuit-founded non-profit that is one of the largest gang intervention programs in the country, and with Victory Outreach, a Pentecostal ministry with over 600 chapters, Flores demonstrates that organizations such as these facilitate recovery from gang life by enabling gang members to reinvent themselves as family men and as members of their community. The book offers a window into the process of redefining masculinity. As Flores convincingly shows, gang members are not trapped in a cycle of poverty and marginality. With the help of urban ministries, such men construct a reformed barrio masculinity to distance themselves from gang life. Edward Orozco Flores is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Loyola University Chicago. "-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-224) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
The Latino crime threat: a century of race, marginality, and public policy in Los Angeles
Into the underclass or out of the barrio? Immigrant integration in Latino Los Angeles
Recovery from gang life: two models of faith and reintegration
Reformed barrio masculinity: eight cases of recovery from gang life
Masculinity and the podium: discourse in gang recovery
From shaved to saved: embodied gang recovery.
Into the underclass or out of the barrio? Immigrant integration in Latino Los Angeles
Recovery from gang life: two models of faith and reintegration
Reformed barrio masculinity: eight cases of recovery from gang life
Masculinity and the podium: discourse in gang recovery
From shaved to saved: embodied gang recovery.