
@article{ref1,
title="Delinquency in Chicago during the roaring twenties: Assembling reality in ethnography",
journal="Journal of gang research",
year="1995",
author="Joe, Karen A.",
volume="3",
number="1",
pages="19-32",
abstract="This article examines the ways in which two classic works from the Chicago school assemble a distinctive voice regarding delinquency in the 1920's.Abstract: 	Frederick Thrasher's &quot;The Gang: A Study of 1,313 Gangs in Chicago,&quot; published in 1927, is still considered the first comprehensive study of the gang phenomena. The study is based on data collected over a 7-year period from &quot;census and court records, personal observations, and personal documents ... from gang boys and from persons who had observed gangs in many contexts.&quot; In exploring the &quot;natural history&quot; of this social phenomena, Thrasher traces the development of the gang to the initial efforts of &quot;spontaneous play groups&quot; to find a source to fill their adventurous and curious needs in a &quot;disorganized and conflict oriented community.&quot; He then turns to the &quot;activities and organization&quot; of gangs and closes with a statement on how to &quot;attack the gang problem.&quot; The second work, Clifford Shaw's &quot;The Jack Roller&quot; (1930), is among the first in-depth and detailed oral histories from the Chicago school. Shaw first provides the reader with an &quot;appropriate sociological framework&quot; for analyzing the &quot;natural history of the delinquent career&quot; of a young man and then proceeds to let Stanley tell his own story of how he entered the world of &quot;Crookdom.&quot; The book concludes with a summary of Stanley's case and the appropriate social treatment. This review of the two works focuses on how the authors &quot;set the scene&quot; for the study of delinquency and then discusses their images of juvenile delinquency during the 1920's. 9 footnotes and 22 references  (NCJRS Abstract)<p />",
language="en",
issn="1079-3062",
doi="Article",
url="http://dx.doi.org/Article"
}