TY - JOUR
T1 - Dissolving borders
T2 - Reframing risk, delinquent peers, and youth violence
AU - Lustig, Deborah Freedman
AU - Sung, Kenzo K.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Berkeley Population Center for their support. This work was partially funded by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development ( NICHD R21 HD056581 ). This publication was also supported by Grant 1 U49 CE000743 from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention . Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. The Youth Experiences of Neighborhood Change research team includes: Alexandra Aylward, Morgan Elam, Dena Fehrenbacher, Mitzi Iñiguez, Shafinaaz Kamrul, Laure Kohne, Jennifer Millman, Luis Morales, Nicole Lindahl, Deborah Lustig, Shaun Ossei-Owusu, Victor Rios, Kyla Searle, Alex Schafran, Jonathan Simon, Kenzo Sung, Zachary Taylor, Sandra Yang. We thank Yolanda Anyon, Alexandra Aylward, David Minkus, Victor Rios, Jonathan Simon, Christine Trost, and the editors for their comments on this article.
PY - 2013/8
Y1 - 2013/8
N2 - Although "association with delinquent peers" is commonly identified as "a risk factor for youth violence," this framework leads us to blame individuals and ignore the complex lives of youth who face state, symbolic, and interpersonal violence. This study is based on interviews with young adults about their adolescence in a low-income immigrant gateway neighborhood of Oakland, California. Most of the interviewees have peer networks that are racially/ethnically diverse and also include both delinquent and conforming peers. We show that having these "doubly diverse" friendship networks helps youth move through their neighborhood safely and feel anchored to their community even when they leave to attend college. Even successful youth in our study do not erect borders between themselves and "delinquent peers." It is easy to assign blame to youth for their friendships, their violent behavior, their lack of education, their unstable and low-paying jobs, but this calculus ignores both the structural factors that constrain youth choices and the benefits that seem to be linked to diverse friendships, even with delinquent peers. Growing up in a site of global capital accumulation and disinvestment in the era of neoliberalism, our interviewees challenge us to reframe risk.
AB - Although "association with delinquent peers" is commonly identified as "a risk factor for youth violence," this framework leads us to blame individuals and ignore the complex lives of youth who face state, symbolic, and interpersonal violence. This study is based on interviews with young adults about their adolescence in a low-income immigrant gateway neighborhood of Oakland, California. Most of the interviewees have peer networks that are racially/ethnically diverse and also include both delinquent and conforming peers. We show that having these "doubly diverse" friendship networks helps youth move through their neighborhood safely and feel anchored to their community even when they leave to attend college. Even successful youth in our study do not erect borders between themselves and "delinquent peers." It is easy to assign blame to youth for their friendships, their violent behavior, their lack of education, their unstable and low-paying jobs, but this calculus ignores both the structural factors that constrain youth choices and the benefits that seem to be linked to diverse friendships, even with delinquent peers. Growing up in a site of global capital accumulation and disinvestment in the era of neoliberalism, our interviewees challenge us to reframe risk.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2013.02.013
DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2013.02.013
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84892557477
SN - 0190-7409
VL - 35
SP - 1197
EP - 1205
JO - Children and Youth Services Review
JF - Children and Youth Services Review
IS - 8
ER -