The Gang as an American Enterprise
214 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Apr 1992
ISBN:9780813518060
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The Gang as an American Enterprise

Rutgers University Press
The Diamonds are a Chicago Street gang whose members are second-generation Puerto Rican youths. For Felix Padilla, the young men who join the Diamonds have made a logical choice. The gang is an alternative and dependable route to emotional support, self-respect, material goods, and upward mobility. Although Padilla shares the same ethnic background as the gang members and also grew up in a Chicago barrio, gaining the trust of the Diamonds was not easy. Eventually, however, he was able to get close enough to the members to interview and observe them.

Padilla shows us his decision to join the Diamonds. From early childhood, boys develop positive images of the gang. They realize that the dominant culture promises mobility, but that their paths to that mobility are blocked. By joining a gang they can creatively oppose the dominant culture. Padilla does not paint a romanticized picture of the Diamonds. Some members come to understand that when they sell drugs, they benefit the gang's leaders and suppliers more than themselves. Further, they recognize that the gang is also subject to problems of domination and inequality. Padilla shows that though the Diamonds are sometimes violent, they are not psychopaths. While we need not approve of what they do, he urges us to understand it as a rational response to the doors these young men see closed around them.
Padilla has dealt with gang drug dealing—one of the more sensationalized features of urban life—n a down-to-earth and realistic fashion. The reader begins to understand poor minority adolescents in a broad sociological context. This book is a significant contribution to urban ethnography. Joan Moore, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Padilla has dealt with gang drug dealing—one of the more sensationalized features of urban life—n a down-to-earth and realistic fashion. The reader begins to understand poor minority adolescents in a broad sociological context. This book is a significant contribution to urban ethnography. Joan Moore, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
FELIX M. PADILLA is an associate professor in the department of sociology and director of the Center for Latino Research at DePaul University in Chicago.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. In Search of a Gang to Study
Chapter 2. A Changing Neighborhood
Chapter 3. Turning: Becoming a Gang Member
Chapter 4. The Diamonds as a Business Enterprise
Chapter 5. Becoming a Street-level Dealer
Chapter 6. Future Aspirations and Limitations: The Catch-22 Consequence of Gang Participation
Conclusion
Reference List
Index
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