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by Marilyn McShane and Frank P. Williams III |
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| Civil Gang Abatement: The Effectiveness and Implications of Policing by Injunction | |||
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Edward L. Allan |
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Allan's work shows how civil gang abatement works as an approach to neighborhood gang problems. Civil gang abatement is an innovative remedy employing civil injunctions to combat public nuisance activity by gangs. This strategy has been promoted as a problem-oriented response to gang problems. Allan examines whether the process of acquiring a "gang injunction" incorporates the primary dimensions of problem-oriented responses: flexibility and community involvement. Flexibility is evident in the even distribution of initiatives among three categories: high-drug, high-crime, and high-disorder. Evidence of community involvement is weak, due to the lack of community organizations in gang-plagued neighborhoods, the low-profile nature of the initiatives, and the potential for retaliation against participants. Although the expectation for community involvement in gang injunction initiatives should be tempered, civil gang abatement is an appropriate approach to neighborhood gang problems. |
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| Edward L. Allan is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at Anna Maria College. He received his Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from the University at Albany. In 1996, he retired at the rank of lieutenant from the Portsmouth (RI) Police Department after 20 years of service. His academic interests include the use of civil remedies to address criminal behavior. | |||
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viii, 292 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-041-8. $70. Published. |
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