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This is a collection of original research reports on the status of
street gangs and problematic youth groups in Europe, as well as a
set of reports on the current status of American street gang
research and its implications for the European gang situation.
Seven American papers are joined with reports from England, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Russia, Holland, Belgium, France, and
Slovenia. Summary chapters by the American and European editors
provide overviews of the street gang picture: the associated issues
and problems of definition, community context, comparative research
procedures, and implications for prevention and intervention.
Professionals and students will find these papers easy to
comprehend yet fully informative on comparative street gang
studies.
Malcolm W. Klein Center for Research on Crime and Social Control
University of Southern California 1. BACKGROUND In June of 1988,
approximately forty scholars and researchers met for four days in
the Leeuwenborst Congres Center in Noordwijkerhout, The
Netherlands, to participate in a workshop entitled Self-Report
Metho dology in Criminological Research. The participants
represented 15 nations and 30 universities and research centers, a
diversity that was matched by the experiences and focal interests
in self-report methods among the participants. This volume is the
result of the workshop process and in particular of the invitations
to participants to prepare pre-conference papers for distribution
prior to the workshop. The chapters in the volume were selected
from the larger set of pre conference papers. As workshop conv ner
and volume editor, it falls on me to set some of the context for
this enterprise. Self-report crime is "admitted" crime, derived
from interview and questionnaire responses obtained from adults and
juveniles (regardless of whether or not they have been arrested)
concerning their own illegal behaviors. Growing awareness of the
limitations of official crime statistics has led to the development
of self-report procedures."
Malcolm W. Klein Center for Research on Crime and Social Control
University of Southern California 1. BACKGROUND In June of 1988,
approximately forty scholars and researchers met for four days in
the Leeuwenborst Congres Center in Noordwijkerhout, The
Netherlands, to participate in a workshop entitled Self-Report
Metho dology in Criminological Research. The participants
represented 15 nations and 30 universities and research centers, a
diversity that was matched by the experiences and focal interests
in self-report methods among the participants. This volume is the
result of the workshop process and in particular of the invitations
to participants to prepare pre-conference papers for distribution
prior to the workshop. The chapters in the volume were selected
from the larger set of pre conference papers. As workshop conv ner
and volume editor, it falls on me to set some of the context for
this enterprise. Self-report crime is "admitted" crime, derived
from interview and questionnaire responses obtained from adults and
juveniles (regardless of whether or not they have been arrested)
concerning their own illegal behaviors. Growing awareness of the
limitations of official crime statistics has led to the development
of self-report procedures."
This is a collection of original research reports on the status of
street gangs and problematic youth groups in Europe, as well as a
set of reports on the current status of American street gang
research and its implications for the European gang situation.
Seven American papers are joined with reports from England, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Russia, Holland, Belgium, France, and
Slovenia. Summary chapters by the American and European editors
provide overviews of the street gang picture: the associated issues
and problems of definition, community context, comparative research
procedures, and implications for prevention and intervention.
Professionals and students will find these papers easy to
comprehend yet fully informative on comparative street gang
studies.
In this brief, accessible text, Malcolm Klein presents insights
gained from his forty years of experience investigating street
gangs. In Part I he reveals some of the dominant trends that have
emerged over the course of his research, defining and describing
gangs, their locations, who joins them, and the types of illegal
behavior in which they engage. In Part II he delves into the
conceptual contexts that help us to understand those trends,
examining gangs in relation to other small groups, comparing gangs
in the U.S. to those in Europe, and discussing approaches to gang
control. About the Series Keynotes in Criminology and Criminal
Justice provides essential knowledge on important contemporary
matters of crime, law, and justice to a broad audience of readers.
Each volume is written by a leading scholar in that area. Concise,
accessible, and affordable, these texts are designed to serve
either as primers around which courses can be built or as
supplemental books for a variety of courses.
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