Thursday, November 14, 2019
Why Female Youths Join Gangs :: Youth Gangs Essays
Why Female Youths Join Gangs  		    	Female youths join street gangs on the basis of gender conflict, lack of family support and  violence in their lives. Through adolescence young females have a much harder time than young  males dealing with family, sexuality and the harsh reality of living in the urban ghetto. Young  females who must endure these facets of life have little opportunity to succeed. Consequently,  these young women turn to a replacement family, a place where they feel they are needed and  loved and can escape reality, even if momentarily. This type of place is in the common street  gang.   	Presently, inner city minorities are hopelessly discriminated and isolated from economic  opportunity. Young females see society as having nothing to offer young minority women.  Neglected communities with high crime and a lack of resources force young females to turn to  others in the same situation for support. Thus, they develop an exaggerated sense of belonging  and gain excitement lacking in their lives (Chesney-Lind 53).  	According to Thornberry there are three types of models that account for gang  membership: selection model, social facilitation model and enhancement model. Female  membership seems to fall into the selection model. The selection model states that gangs only  recruit or associate with already delinquent persons (Dukes, Martinez, Stein 143). In 1994  ââ¬Å"females accounted for 24% of all juvenile arrestsâ⬠ (Chesney-Lind 11). Also, female gang  members show higher levels of delinquency than non gang members (Curry 12). However, they  do not necessarily influence members once in the gang. Such as many researchers have found;  once in a gang, female members are not expected to involve themselves in delinquency.  	Recent estimates of female gang involvement have shown a tremendous increase in  female membership. These increases have become great enough to turn researchers attention to  female gang members. Studies have shown that ten to thirty eight percent of gang members are  female (qtd. in Miller 431). Miller has recognized two different types of female gangs. First, the  independent female gang. The independent female gang is completely separate of the male gang.  The females make their own set of rules and have decision making powers. Millerââ¬â¢s studies have  shown that less than ten percent of  female gangs are independent (qtd. in Chesney-Lind 46).  Second, the auxiliary gang (qtd. in Curry 105). The auxiliary female gang is the most common  and one in which the females are separate from the males in the gang, but are still apart of the  whole gang. The males make all the decisions and essentially control the females. These type of  female gang groups are, ââ¬Å"an expression of the gender relations and boundaries of societyâ⬠ (qtd.  					    
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