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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Emily Kan; Jordan Beardslee; Paul J. Frick; Laurence Steinberg; Elizabeth Cauffman – Applied Developmental Science, 2024
This study examined whether the extent to which youth experience consequences resulting from substance use was related to their impulse control. Longitudinal data are from 1,216 justice-system-involved male adolescents from the Crossroads Study (46% Latino, 37% Black, 15% White, and 2% self-identified other race). Results indicate that youth lower…
Descriptors: Self Control, Juvenile Justice, Males, Adolescents
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Fahmy, Chantal; Clark, Kendra J.; Mitchell, Meghan M.; Decker, Scott H.; Pyrooz, David C. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
After nearly four decades of growth, the number of people held in U.S. prisons has begun to decline. In an era of decarceration, social scientists need to understand prisoner reentry experiences. Longitudinal studies are one strategy to accomplish this goal. Yet, the retention of a formerly incarcerated population across waves of interviews is…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Males
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Desmond U. Patton; David Pyrooz; Scott Decker; William R. Frey; Patrick Leonard – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2019
Mounting evidence suggests that social media can exacerbate tensions among gangs that ultimately lead to violence, but serious questions remain about precisely how conflict online translates to conflict offline. The purpose of this study is to examine the ways in which gang violence can be mediated by the Internet. We conducted a sociolinguistic…
Descriptors: Social Media, Juvenile Gangs, Violence, Computer Mediated Communication
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Patton, Desmond Upton; Leonard, Patrick; Elaesser, Caitlin; Eschmann, Robert D.; Patel, Sadiq; Crosby, Shantel – Youth & Society, 2019
Youth living in violent urban neighborhoods increasingly post messages online from urban street corners. The decline of the digital divide and the proliferation of social media platforms connect youth to peer communities who may share experiences with neighborhood stress and trauma. Social media can also be used for targeted retribution when…
Descriptors: Social Media, Juvenile Gangs, Males, African Americans
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Chavez Villegas, Cirenia; Butti, Elena – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2020
The relation between being out of school and participating in criminal economies is widely documented in the literature on youth delinquency. However, the complex connection between these two phenomena has not yet been fully unpacked. This paper draws from two studies that we, the authors, conducted separately to explore the role educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Delinquency, Criminals, Crime
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Huerta, Adrian H.; Rios-Aguilar, Cecilia – Urban Education, 2021
Latinos represent 20% of the more than 1 million gang-associated youth in the United States. This study explores how gang associated Latino males use their funds of gang knowledge to navigate their urban schools and communities. The findings highlight how Latino males build relationships and exchange information with each other, endure and…
Descriptors: Males, Hispanic Americans, Juvenile Gangs, Cultural Background
Huerta, Adrian H.; Rios-Aguilar, Cecilia – Online Submission, 2018
Latinos represent 20% of the more than 1 million gang-associated youth in the United States. This study explores how gang associated Latino males use their funds of gang knowledge to navigate their urban schools and communities. The findings highlight how Latino males build relationships and exchange information with each other, endure and…
Descriptors: Males, Hispanic Americans, Juvenile Gangs, Cultural Background
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Upadhyayula, Satyasree; Ramaswamy, Megha; Chalise, Prabhakar; Daniels, Jessie; Freudenberg, Nicholas – Youth & Society, 2017
The goal of this study was to understand whether ethnic pride among young, incarcerated Black and Latino men was associated with successful community reentry. We interviewed 397 Black and Latino men 16 to 18 years old in a New York City jail and then again 1 year after their release to determine the relationship between participants' sense of…
Descriptors: Correlation, Ethnicity, Males, Hispanic Americans
Huerta, Adrian H. – Online Submission, 2015
Nationally, only half of Latino males graduate from high school (Contreras, 2011). Scholars are beginning to critically examine the various internal and external influences which contribute to low academic achievement for Latino males. This qualitative study uses a human ecological theory to examine how Latino male high school students with high…
Descriptors: Males, Hispanic American Students, High School Students, Qualitative Research
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Randell, Stacy T.; Smith, Amy E.; Steinman, Bernard A. – Afterschool Matters, 2015
American youth do not have equal access to academic success and life achievements. In particular, low-income male students of color are disproportionately failing in school, filling prisons, and enduring the consequences of low social capital and poor investment in their futures. Unfortunately, many young people cope with poverty and life in…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Low Income Groups, Males, Minority Groups
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Gass, Kayla M.; Laughter, Judson C. – Journal of Negro Education, 2015
This article reports on one teacher's year-long project seeking to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline through class dialogue around gang affiliations. The review of literature defines the school-to-prison pipeline and its connections to gang affiliation. The study engaged methods of qualitative action research with seven male participants…
Descriptors: Juvenile Gangs, Teacher Influence, Adolescents, Males
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Salaam, Abeeb Olufemi; Brown, Jennifer – International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2012
The current study explores the rate at which members of Lagos' "area boys" engage in drug and alcohol use, and determines the predictive roles of parental and neighbourhood characteristics in the gang patterns of psychoactive substance misuse behaviour. The study approached gang members (N = 129) aged from 18 to 38 years (M = 25.83, SD = 4.82)…
Descriptors: Juvenile Gangs, Marijuana, Drinking, Risk
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Czymoniewicz-Klippel, Melina T. – Youth & Society, 2013
This article explores the experiences of adolescent males in Cambodia who, simultaneous to their maltreatment and marginalization within the family and community, have reduced opportunities to produce identities of sociomoral value through access to cultural capital. It draws on ethnographic data gathered from adolescents boys aged 9 to 16 in Siem…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Males, Preadolescents, Adolescents
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Bey, Sharif – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2012
This autoethnographic study contextualizes gangland visual culture (graffiti, tattoos, public/private shrines) in order to illustrate how young African American males memorialized victims of violence between the years 1993-1997 in Beltzhoover, an inner city African American community on Pittsburgh's Southside. The author, a former resident of the…
Descriptors: Art, Art Expression, Art Products, Violence
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Chhuon, Vichet – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2014
In response to a literature that has paid limited attention to the complex representations of Cambodian students, this article investigated the ways in which Cambodian male youth were problematized in school through Discourses that presented them as apathetic students and/or gang members at one California high school. In this study, the ways in…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, Males, Social Bias, Negative Attitudes
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