This is a well written chapter that counters mainstream ideology of how punishment is applied. Here, the author clearly delineates the social context of marginalized urban youth and how they are unjustly targeted as criminals for behaviors that would most likely be disregarded if exhibited by a White student or by one belonging to a higher social class. The results of this study has a great potential to elevate emancipatory practices in breaking the cycle of injustice experienced in the daily lives of urban youth.
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Criminalizing Urban Youth
This is a well written chapter that counters mainstream ideology of how punishment is applied. Here, the author clearly delineates the social context of marginalized urban youth and how they are unjustly targeted as criminals for behaviors that would most likely be disregarded if exhibited by a White student or by one belonging to a higher social class. The results of this study has a great potential to elevate emancipatory practices in breaking the cycle of injustice experienced in the daily lives of urban youth.
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Hurry up and Write! I'll admit it - I'm a slow writer. I have always been. Articulating my ideas and getting them on paper is...
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In the chapter titled: "Critical Social Theory and the Study of Urban School Discipline", Kathleen Nolan presents the results of...
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"Change that cannot happen when the privileges of some are built on the dispersed waste of so many others." (Kratz, 2010). T...
Rosa, you used the word "normalized" and I think that really captures some of the big issues with the ideology of punishment. The ways in which urban youth are depicted, normalizes their punishment. For example, this news came out that this young man will serve 5 years in jail for stealing a pair of sneakers (https://www.theroot.com/georgia-teen-with-no-prior-record-sentenced-to-5-years-1826480462). On the other hand, Trump has pardoned several convicted criminals including Joe Arpaio and Dinesh D'Souza (https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/31/politics/martha-stewart-rod-blagojevich-trump-pardons/index.html).
ReplyDeleteFor some reason, society finds it acceptable to dispense punishment not based on the crime, but the social class of the individual.
Totally! Which connects back nicely to Chiquita's comment about language on Rosa's previous post. And I'd add that their punishment further criminalizes them (so it's kind of cyclic) and that this criminalization 'normalizes' their precarious economic status (and that of entire communities) and/or someone's removal from their community altogether via incarceration.
DeleteDavid and Rosa you both bring up a very interesting point about normalizing behavior to justify the punishment. I think this is an important concept with the black lives matter movement. It has become normal to believe that all black men are criminals which is why people feel that it is okay to shoot innocent unarmed black men and the justice system has done nothing to prevent or punish those who have committed these crimes against these men. I think we see on a daily bases how social class plays out in the justice system. Let’s take the case of Brock Turner, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_v._Turner, this young man’s social class and privilege got him off of rape charges. Many argue that is race played a large part in his conviction, no one know that for sure. However, statics show that we less Brock Turners in jail then we do Dayonn Davis’ so one can only imagine that class, privilege and race play a huge role in our justice system.
ReplyDeleteGood point. Regarding activism, I find it interesting how BLM is framed vs. the current (primarily white-led) uprising against gun violence/the NRA -- and how these framings relate to the normalization of violence against Black and Brown folks.
DeleteSo I'm thinking about connections to your project here, Rosa! I know the topics are very different -- but I am wondering about how Marxist social reproduction theory (e.g. that of Bourdieu) helps explain the "gentrification" of bilingual ed. How are bilingual ed programs/schools reflective of the broader class system? How are they used to secure future class status for MC and UC students? AND -- how is the "gentrification" of biled normalized? What discourses/ideologies are at work here?
ReplyDeleteFor instance, in literal gentrification of urban neighborhoods, we here discourses around urban "decay" and "renewal" to normalize the displacement of WC and poor people of color from those neighborhoods and white MC/UC seizure of those spaces.
So there's the mechanics of gentrification (structures, techniques) and discourses (language,normalizing framings). And then -- how do WC bilingual families of color resist this gentrification?
I agree. I see the connections with the normalization of the disparities between the social hierarchies and for my proposed study, the normalization of gentrification. This article expanded my connections with possibly explaining what is happening in dual-language programs in terms of them being gentrified with social reproduction theory and how this shift hasn't been questioned since it's been normalized. This definitely broadens the applicability of other theories to my project.
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