Policy Implications of the Changing Juvenile Gang Dynamics in Durham, North Carolina
Abstract
Across the country, juvenile gang membership has increased in places which don’t quite
fit the mold of a conventional gang city. Durham, North Carolina is just such a place:
a mid-sized city in the south with a tobacco manufacturing history and a reputation
for good music. For the past couple decades, however, the city has also gained notoriety
as a regional center of gang activity. Conventionally, the reason why juvenile gang
membership concerns policymakers is crime, and typically rates of juvenile gang involvement
are correlative to rates of juvenile crime. Yet what happens when these trends begin
to diverge? This is the question that has been puzzling Durham policymakers since
2009: despite notable successes at reducing crime, juvenile gang membership has increased,
raising a number of questions. If juvenile gang membership does not necessarily increase
crime in a city, then should is still matter from a policy perspective? This thesis
explores these recent developments in Durham and seeks to evaluate the ways in which
juvenile gang membership should impact public safety policy.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Public Policy StudiesPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/8367Citation
Paddock, Ellen (2014). Policy Implications of the Changing Juvenile Gang Dynamics in Durham, North Carolina.
Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/8367.Collections
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