
Life on the Malecón
Children and Youth on the Streets of Santo Domingo
Life on the Malecón is a narrative ethnography of the lives of street children and youth living in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, and the non-governmental organizations that provide social services for them. Writing from the perspective of an anthropologist working as a street educator with a child welfare organization, Jon M. Wolseth follows the intersecting lives of children, the institutions they come into contact with, and the relationships they have with each other, their families, and organization workers.
Often socioeconomic conditions push these children to move from their homes to the streets, but sometimes they themselves may choose the allure of the perceived freedoms and opportunities that street life has to offer. What they find, instead, is violence, disease, and exploitation—the daily reality through which they learn to maneuver and survive. Wolseth describes the stresses, rewards, and failures of the organizations and educators who devote their resources to working with this population.
The portrait of Santo Domingo’s street children and youth population that emerges is of a diverse community with variations that may be partly related to skin color, gender, and class. The conditions for these youth are changing as the economy of the Dominican Republic changes. Although the children at the core of this book live and sleep on avenues and plazas and in abandoned city buildings, they are not necessarily glue- and solvent-sniffing beggars or petty thieves on the margins of society. Instead, they hold a key position in the service sector of an economy centered on tourism.
Life on the Malecón offers a window into the complex relationships children and youth construct in the course of mapping out their social environment. Using a child-centered approach, Wolseth focuses on the social lives of the children by relating the stories that they themselves tell as well as the activities he observes.
Life on the Malecόn captures the experience of street children and youth at a particular point and time in Santo Domingo, and it tells a very important story about childhood and community, survival and strategies, and interconnected relationships and agencies.
The stories Wolseth tells are compelling. The children’s voices challenge readers to rethink one-sided views about poor street youth and encourage them to adopt more nuanced approaches to poor kids ‘choices.’ Brilliant work!
JON M. WOLSETH, PhD, has published widely on the intersection of violence, marginality, and adolescence in Latin America, including Jesus and the Gang: Youth Violence and Christianity in Urban Honduras.
Introduction
Children as Cultural Agents
Structure and Agency on Dominican Streets
Organization of Book
Methods: The Anthropologist as Outreach Educator
1. Outreach Work
Crying Wolf
Going Home
The First Hurdle
Telling the Truth
Back on the Conde
Commentary
2. Structural Conditions
Entering Rehab
Maria's Condition
Going to Prison
Off the Streets
Commentary
3. Friendship and Everyday Violence on the Street
Aftermath
Commentary
Conclusion
Notes
Referecnes
Index