Chops Porter Institute

Chicago - Street Workers are key "violence interrupters"

Our note: the Providence Street Workers are doing these same activities. We're glad to see allies across the country. And, we're always thrilled when academia endorses the work of front line practitioners like street workers.

The violence virus
Boston Globe Op-Ed
By Susan C. Scrimshaw  |  April 22, 2007

IN URBAN areas across our nation, hardly a day goes by without news of a shooting. Many such incidents start with a rash argument between young people armed with guns. The typical response, when shootings increase, is to enhance law enforcement, but that is only part of the solution.

This deadly cycle of shootings is a public-health epidemic. By approaching it as such -- as a contagious disease of underlying expectations and pressures, one that is both treatable and preventable -- we can make significant progress toward halting it.

Urban violence is spread largely by expectations among youths in many gangs: If you insult or harm me, I must harm you. That powerful peer pressure and behavior is transmitted, like a virus, from person to person and gang to gang -- until there's a violent outbreak, and someone is killed. Then the virus is quiet until another outbreak.

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April 24, 2007 in Front Page, In the News, Research | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Developmental Assets

Link: 40 Developmental Assets.

40 Developmental Assets�

Through extensive research, Search Institute has identified the following 40 building blocks of healthy development that help young people grow up healthy, caring, and responsible.


September 29, 2006 in Front Page, Research, Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

Harvard research links

  • Operation Ceasefire / Boston Gun Project - Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government - David M. Kennedy, Anthony A. Braga, and Anne M. Piehl
  • Christopher Winship, chair of Harvard's Department of Sociology

February 09, 2006 in History, Research | Permalink | Comments (0)

An Economic Analysis of a drug-selling gang's finances

Click here to read the research paper by Steven D. Levitt & Sudhir Venkatesh that explored the question, if drug dealing is so (allegedly) lucrative, why do so many dealers live with their moms? Levitt is the co-author of the best-selling book Freakonomics.

August 08, 2005 in Research | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Streetwork links

  • Boston Globe 2007 Homicide map
  • Dorchester Youth Collaborative (DYC)
    Dorchester, MA
  • Institute for the Study & Practice of Nonviolence
    Providence, RI
  • Smash 2.0
  • Streetworkers on Boston Strategy site
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