Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Review of Code of the Street Decency, Violence, and the...

For this assignment I decided to read the book Code of the Street: decency, violence, and the moral life of the inner city by Elijah Anderson. This book is about how inner city people live and try and survive by living with the code of the streets. The code of the streets is basically morals and values that these people have. Most of the time it is the way they need to act to survive. Continuing on within this book review I am going to discuss the main points and arguments that Anderson portrays within the book. The main points that the book has, goes along with the chapters. These points consist of Street and decent families, respect, drugs violence, street crime, decent daddy, the mating game, black inner city grandmother. Now within†¦show more content†¦Objects consist of clothes, money, jewelry and almost anything that they can steal from other people. Although having juice is meant to get you respect it can also make the person a target this is shown in the book here, à ¢â‚¬Å"there are no guarantees against challenges, because there are always people around looking to fight to increase their share of respect.† Anderson (1999). Also if you are highly respected and feared someone might think that if they can steal from you or beat you down then they will gain more juice. The next argument that I was seeing in this chapter was about the people needing juice. After reading that people can be subjected to more violence I don’t believe they should really be looking to get juice especially if all they want is respect I’m sure that they can find respect in another form. Continuing on the next chapter is drugs, violence, and street crime. Now this chapter actually gets into the discussion of how the people become involved with drugs and mainly the selling of them. The main theme is youths and their involvement, most of these youths get involved with the drugs because they are a part of a neighborhood peer group. Most of these peer groups potentially started out as groups of friends, or youth groups and then turned into gangs of some sort. Also it discusses that youths from decent families are very resistant, but the ones who are supposed to be bread winners but have very littleShow MoreRelatedAlbert Bandura s Social Learning Theory1737 Words   |  7 Pagesdoes not give the specific conditions that criminality is cultivated among people but explains that most people seek legal ways because of reinforcements such as money and status. However, the theory fails to explain why some people choose a life of violence and crime despite the punishment associ ated such as incarceration and mob justice. Ronald Akers’ idea of social learning theory stemmed from the theory of differential association by Sutherland (Matseuda, 1982). 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