No COLORS: 100 Ways To Stop Gangs From Taking Away Our Communities - Softcover

Kipper, Bobby; Ramey, Bud

 
9781614480990: No COLORS: 100 Ways To Stop Gangs From Taking Away Our Communities

Inhaltsangabe

No Colors is a Warning


No community wants to admit it has a gang problem. Yet that denial and the unwillingness to address youth violence as a community problem will have tragic consequences.


If your community does not address the crisis, the epidemic of youth violence will erode your city or town with a potential that is both frightening and tragic. We cannot wait on government to solve this problem. We must approach the solution as a unified community.


No COLORS is a story of hope.


Many cities are winning this battle for the minds and hearts of our youth. No COLORS brings these success stories to you to help you shape your community's plan…


Citizens and Community Leaders-Discover 100 benchmark ways to save our kids from gangs


Educators and Parents-See how See how we can “gang proof” our schools and recognize early warning signs


Law Enforcement-Broaden our role beyond punishment to rewarding interventions


Church Communities-Learn from faith-based initiatives across America that are saving our youth


No COLORS will move you to action


Ultimately, No COLORS, and the significant research and effort on which it is based, represent the many voices and experiences-including the authors' own-that Ramey and Kipper have brought together to share with you. At the very least it will inform you. At best it will enlighten you. And if you are open to its compelling message, it will move you to action.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Bobby Kipper is founder of the National Center for the Prevention of Community Violence. He is a battle-hardened ex-cop with a quarter century of community policing in one of America’s toughest gang environments. Kipper organized one of the most effective crime prevention programs ever developed by the Justice Department. He has consulted for the White House, for Congress, for governors and for communities across the nation.

Bud Ramey is the 2010 Public Affairs Silver Anvil Award winner of the Public Relations Society of America - the highest public affairs recognition in the world. His grassroots public affairs and humanitarian successes stretch across three decades.

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No Colors

100 Ways to STOP GANGS from Taking Away Our Communities

By Bobby Kipper, Bud Ramey

Morgan James Publishing

Copyright © 2012 BOBBY KIPPER & BUD RAMEY
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-61448-099-0

Contents

Dedication,
Foreword,
Part One: AMERICA'S NIGHTMARE,
The Problem,
The Denial,
Why Now?,
Just How Bad Can This Get?,
How Are Communities Responding?,
What Is Working,
Part Two: 100 TACTICS FOR SAVING YOUR COMMUNITY FROM GANGS,
1 Proclaim a New Social Norm: Citizens Set the Strategy]TC1TC1[Executive Summary,
2 Face Down Community Denial,
3 Develop Overall Community Ownership of the Plan,
4 "View the Seeds of the Problem",
5 Pick a Civic Group Champion,
6 Empower Your Mayor to Lead — Or Elect a New One Who Will,
7 Reach Deep into the Community for Your Plan,
8 Separate, Empower the Operational Council,
9 Focus on the Worst Problems First,
10 Create the Vision and Clear Goals,
11 Tear Down the Walls — Relationships Matter,
12 Fund Measured Programs That Work,
13 Expect Resistance after Years of Heads Buried in the Sand,
14 Harness Faith-Based Interventions,
15 Set Clear Goals from 10,000 Feet,
16 Measurement Is Everything — Indicators to Steer By,
17 Assure an Independent Audit,
18 Conduct Baseline Survey of Student Perceptions,
19 Make Sure the News Media Understands,
20 Train Community Leaders as well as the Providers,
21 Communicate Aggressively, Continuously,
22 Partner with Your Local University,
23 Reconnect Community and Schools,
24 Publish a Gang Awareness Resource to the Community,
25 Expand After School Activities, Police Athletic League,
26 Seed Each High School with Student Leaders Trained in Mediation, Inclusiveness, Race Relations, Non-Violence,
27 Let the Kids Design "Stop Bullying" Programs,
28 Small School Efforts Pay Dividends,
29 Deflect Violence with Non-confrontational Conversations,
30 Create Safe Street Teams,
31 Camps Build Trust with Police,
32 Deliver Creative School Interventions in Elementary, Middle and High School,
33 Gang Exit Centers — Rescuing Kids from Gangs,
34 Middle Schoolers Targeted as Key Rural Strategy,
35 Generate Amazing Results with Restorative Justice in Schools,
36 Teach Business English, Social Skills in Elementary School,
37 Take Truancy Interventions to the Homes,
38 Go With Special Efforts to Target Hard to Reach Hispanic Youth,
39 Train School Board Members and "Student Advocates",
40 De-Glamorize Gang Culture,
41 Consider Fifteen Absolutely Essential School Anti-Gang Initiatives,
42 Challenge and Reward At-Risk Elementary and Middle School Kids Directly,
43 D.A.R.E. Works — Bring It Back. Strengthen It.,
44 Deploy the Boys & Girls Clubs in Targeted Schools,
45 Lights On After School,
46 Remove Graffiti Immediately,
47 Hire At-Risk Youth,
48 GPS Gang Members like High-risk Sex Offenders,
49 Hold Regular Gang Prevention Community Meetings,
50 Engineer Second Chances for Exiting Gang Members,
51 Bring Civil Suits Against Gang Members,
52 Open and Program Your Recreation Centers at Night,
53 Send a Strong Message to Teens That They Are Important to the Community.,
54 Develop a Support Program for Parents of Gang Members,
55 Create a Youth-Led Movement Against Violence,
56 Use Great Resources Well — But Don't Over Complicate Your Plan,
57 Strengthen Prevention with the Arts,
58 Cool Bus Picks Up Kids for After School Activities,
59 Create Interventions for the 19- to 25-Year-Olds,
60 Proclaim Youth Violence Prevention Week,
61 Create a Funding Strategy and Build Neighborhood Centers,
62 Operate a Confidential Telephone Tip Line,
63 Develop Violent Crime Suppression Teams,
64 Operate a Confidential Texting Program,
65 Create Sporting Events Especially for At-Risk Kids,
66 Bring in the Hospitals for Powerful Interventions,
67 Form a Prisoner Re-entry Council,
68 Create a Focused Strike Team for a Hardened Base of Crime,
69 Work with Your State Elected Officials. Much Can Be Done,
70 Create Special Events to Raise Funds and Awareness,
71 Get Business Fired Up,
72 Study CeaseFire as a Strategic Option,
73 Mainstream At-Risk Kids into Normal Channels,
74 Create a Season of Peace Campaign,
75 Offer Life Altering Tattoo Removal,
76 Call in a Warning to the Gang Leaders,
77 Enforce Curfew with Sweeps,
78 Get At-Risk Kids into Outdoor Adventure, Exploration,
79 Create Robust Summer Activities, Jobs for At-Risk Kids,
80 Insist On a Planned Budget for Gang Prevention Strategy,
81 Nurture Growth of Neighborhood Crime Watch Programs,
82 Set Up Family Days and Neighborhood Nights,
83 Explain the Situation in Detail to Your Citizens,
84 Quit Imprisoning Nonviolent Offenders,
85 Work Closely with Neighboring Jurisdictions,
86 Know At-Risk Kids by Name,
87 Promote Your Initiatives Using Websites and Social Media,
88 Expand the Role of Police with Community Policing,
89 Deploy Prosecutors in the Neighborhoods with Community Prosecution,
90 Call for Injunctions Against Specific Gangs,
91 Don't Let Gangs Take Over Your Shopping Mall,
92 Check your State Gang Statutes — Prosecute Gang Recruitment,
93 Cultural Targeting of Parenting Classes Creates Support Groups,
94 Consider the Judicial Innovation of Community Courts,
95 Attack Poverty's Impact on Young People with a Youth Enrichment Zone,
96 Share, Communicate, Cooperate with Regional Gang Summits,
97 House Calls,
98 Confront Gangs with a Trained Ministers Ride-Along Campaign,
99 Walking School Bus Creates Safer Neighborhoods,
100 Honor the Heroes — Create Peace Prize for Interventionists,
Endnotes,
Bibliography,
About the Authors,


CHAPTER 1

The Problem


On summer nights under the lights of the South Morrison field in Newport News, the sound of gunshots punctuated almost every adult league softball game.

From time to time, gang members as young as ten would race past the field, running from something, or someone, unseen. Later, an ambulance siren would cast a flashing red light on the field as the EMTs worked expertly, but sometimes futilely, over another kid who took a bullet.

Both of us spent a quarter century living in the same town, watching gangs slowly take over our city — a problem unacknowledged by the community for years.

It takes a while.

In consulting across the country, we continue to see a strong element of denial almost everywhere. The biggest struggle initially in communities is in countering the disbelief that gangs are a clear and present threat.

So two people who played softball, and who happened to be a seasoned cop and a public affairs specialist respectively, began collaborating, beginning with the compilation of the tactics, approaches and best practices being deployed to combat gangs and youth violence both at home and internationally.

Our hope is that the good and well-intended people who see this book will arrive at the conclusion that, yes, we must deal with the crisis in our community, and yes, in doing so we can be effective and creative and can even find the...

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