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Preventing gang violence in San Diego
Sign on San Diego ^ | September 14, 2010 | Ami C. Carpenter and Anthony Ceja

Posted on 09/14/2010 9:39:22 PM PDT by UncleHambone

Half of the world’s population – 3 billion people – lives in urban areas, and we are witnessing a transformation in how cities organize to prevent community and gang violence. Police departments have acknowledged that “we can’t arrest our way” to peaceful communities. And in fact the most dramatic declines in violence are found in cities like Minneapolis , Chicago – and, yes, San Diego – that have launched neighborhood-level strategies to prevent violence, supported by state and federal funding. Today, the San Diego Summit on Gang Prevention and Intervention celebrates the urban resilience of San Diego. The summit will bring together 350 of our city and county policymakers, community and school-based leaders and organizations, law enforcement and community members. We will share information about strategies to prevent the growth of gang activity and violence in San Diego County neighborhoods and expand our efforts regionally through strategic planning sessions led by North County, city of San Diego communities (Mira Mesa, Linda Vista, Southeast, Mid-City) and East County.

The parallels between strategies for building peace in international conflict zones and those for preventing community violence in U.S. cities are striking. Cities like Los Angeles , Detroit and Philadelphia are using peacekeepers to monitor street-level security conditions; peacemakers to mediate and broker cease-fires between rival gangs; early warning and response teams that prevent triggering incidents from escalating into shootouts; and long-term (collaborative) peacebuilding programs coordinated between law enforcement, the private sector and community leaders that offer real incentives (job training and placement, life skills training) and disincentives (close monitoring, harsh sanctions for violent behavior) that encourage gang members to adopt pro-social, nonviolent behavior and transition out of the gang lifestyle.

To understand why street-level strategies work so well, we must understand that local communities are more than territorial or geographical spaces occupied by people. Instead, we must think of them as places where people live, work and address social problems. In other words, community is not urban space – it is what we do within that space. For the last decade, San Diego communities have been doing things that prevent their young people from taking up arms against each other or becoming unwitting victims to the armed groups in their midst. A smattering of these projects: police, service providers and faith leaders come together for twice-monthly collaborative curfew sweeps at Mountain View, Southcrest and Memorial; parents join arms for the Safe Passage Program at Montgomery and Mann Middle Schools to keep gangs from harassing children on their way to school; Project Safeway monitors 15 corners in southeastern San Diego to keep them free of violence; and Hire A Youth summer program gave jobs to 3,000 youths countywide.

The success of these programs is unequivocal. Violence is not inevitable. Instead, interpersonal relationships and ability to organize – across faith, ethnic or racial divides – makes neighborhoods resilient to violence. What does resilience look like? Parents joining hands across racial lines, faith leaders across religious boundaries, police officers alongside former gang members – each with a shared interest and a common goal. San Diego belongs to the 13 Cities Gang Prevention Network, the first of its kind in the nation, which focuses on California cities’ efforts to bring prevention, intervention and enforcement together to combat gang violence and victimization.

Throughout this county, there are many unsung heroes working tirelessly to provide education, mentoring, tutoring, sports and recreation, and many other prevention/intervention services for our young people. Law enforcement personnel are heroes as well, putting their lives on the line to suppress gang activity and the crimes connected to it.

Many of these people will come together at the University of San Diego today to share information and inspiration with each other and hopefully to learn and move forward in their great work a little stronger than before.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; US: California
KEYWORDS: gangs; police

1 posted on 09/14/2010 9:39:27 PM PDT by UncleHambone
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To: UncleHambone

When I was young we moved from my beloved Florida to San Diego and it was just beautiful ... we lived in Chula Vista and it was heaven. I wouldn’t drive through there with my doors locked at noon today.


2 posted on 09/14/2010 9:43:38 PM PDT by jessduntno (The Victory Mosque will be built over our dead bodies over our dead bodies ...)
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To: UncleHambone

Dramatic declines in violence in Chicago? Chicago? LOL, someone has been hitting the medical marijuana cabinet.


3 posted on 09/14/2010 9:48:30 PM PDT by mike-zed
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To: UncleHambone

Go out tomorrow and shoot everyone who has underdrawers showing and the problem will clear up overnight!


4 posted on 09/14/2010 9:56:58 PM PDT by SWAMPSNIPER (The Second Amendment, A Matter Of Fact, Not A Matter Of Opinion)
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To: SWAMPSNIPER

ditto


5 posted on 09/14/2010 10:05:45 PM PDT by umgud (Obama is a failed experiment.)
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To: UncleHambone

“Police departments have acknowledged that ‘we can’t arrest our way’ to peaceful communities”

When it’s gotten to be that bad, the only solution is to MOVE AWAY from such communities, to places that are are more peaceful.

Sadly, there are some places — perhaps an increasing number of them — in America where no solutions can be found. The only reasonable course of action is to get out.


6 posted on 09/14/2010 10:05:45 PM PDT by Grumplestiltskin (I may look new, but it's only deja vu!)
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To: umgud

Either that or everyone who is making wierd signs with their fingers!


7 posted on 09/14/2010 10:08:10 PM PDT by SWAMPSNIPER (The Second Amendment, A Matter Of Fact, Not A Matter Of Opinion)
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To: Grumplestiltskin

When you get out, you turn it over to them.

Look for solutions to build the younger generation while there is still time.

Politics are dynamic. For every liberal ploy there is a conservative position of virtue which can succeed.

Look at the incentives the gang members are seeking and provide it to them more securely through faith in Christ by the institutions He has established. It begins with education, not academia, but in teaching younger generations how to think.


8 posted on 09/14/2010 10:10:37 PM PDT by Cvengr (Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.)
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To: UncleHambone
Half of the world’s population – 3 billion people – lives in urban areas what the other half lives in India,China? Just sounds strange to me.. now back to topic. Moved away from San Diego area 5 years ago. Was best move.
9 posted on 09/14/2010 10:13:24 PM PDT by ColdOne (November and Beyond!)
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To: UncleHambone

As long as the strong father and husband figure is conspicously absent in these gang members lives only to be replaced with slightly older gang members raising them, then this problem will persist.

And despite what the article says about not being able to arrest our way to a peaceful neighborhood, I call BS. Weak prosecution and no jail space are directly responsible for the revolving door and continued violence.

I see citizens dealing with this problem themselves before another solution is found.


10 posted on 09/15/2010 2:18:32 AM PDT by Molon Labbie
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To: UncleHambone

This is sad to me. It is a slippery slope It seems the communist movement is growing in the US. All their countries have neighbors watching so they can turn in any person that doesn’t support the government.


11 posted on 09/15/2010 5:15:27 AM PDT by seemoAR
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