| | |  | | Home » Don't Shoot: One Man, A Street Fellowship, and the End of Violence in Inner-City America | | | | | | | Description: | | Gang- and drug-related inner-city violence, with its attendant epidemic of incarceration, is the defining crime problem in our country. In some neighborhoods in America, one out of every two hundred young black men is shot to death every year, and few initiatives of government and law enforcement have made much difference. But when David Kennedy, a self-taught and then-unknown criminologist, engineered the "Boston Miracle" in the mid-1990s, he pointed the way toward what few had imagined: a solution. Don't Shoot tells the story of Kennedy's long journey. Riding with beat cops, hanging with gang members, and stoop-sitting with grandmothers, Kennedy found that all parties misunderstood each other, caught in a spiral of racialized anger and distrust. He envisioned an approach in which everyone-gang members, cops, and community members-comes together in what is essentially a huge intervention. Offenders are told that the violence must stop, that even the cops want them to stay alive and out of prison, and that even their families support swift law enforcement if the violence continues. In city after city, the same miracle has followed: violence plummets, drug markets dry up, and the relationship between the police and the community is reset. This is a landmark book, chronicling a paradigm shift in how we address one of America's most shameful social problems. A riveting, page-turning read, it combines the street vérité of The Wire, the social science of Gang Leader for a Day, and the moral urgency and personal journey of Fist Stick Knife Gun. But unlike anybody else, Kennedy shows that there could be an end in sight.
| | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| David M. Kennedy | | Hardcover:
| 320 pages | | Publisher:
| Bloomsbury USA | | Publication Date:
| September 27, 2011 | | Language:
| English | | ISBN:
| 1608192644 | | Product Width:
| 162.25 centimeters | | Product Height:
| 234.25 centimeters | | Product Weight:
| 1.11 pounds | | Package Length:
| 9.3 inches | | Package Width:
| 6.2 inches | | Package Height:
| 1.1 inches | | Package Weight:
| 0.85 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 35 reviews |
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| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
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( 35 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 found the following review helpful:
The best book about policing that I have every read!Nov 01, 2011
By Buck If you are in law enforcement (I have been for over 16 years), in the criminology field, in the criminal justice system, or just someone with an interest in making your community a better place, then you must read this book. It confirms everything that we already know: most crime, particularly serious crime, is committed by a relatively few people in a relatively few places. And of those relative few, even fewer are what we would consider "hardcore." The police know those people and those places, and as Malcolm Gladwell has noted, "When a problem is that concentrated you can wrap your arms around it and think about solving it." Lately we have been trying to solve it with strategies like repeat offender programs and hot spot policing, but our efforts have generally been centered on law enforcement. In the case of repeat offenders, the call from those like Dr. Jerry Ratcliffe has been not more arrests but the right arrests. Now David Kennedy takes us to place that we didn't know about. What if we could bring down violence and eliminate drug markets without making arrests? We can. And what if it just wasn't us in law enforcement doing it but the whole community that serious crime impacts, including the offenders themselves? In can be. And what if it could work no matter where, as long we stuck to very basic principles? It does. You'll be surprised by the simplicity of the book's premise, and if you are in law enforcement, you may be a little ashamed by its truth- the concept of legitimacy. If you are going to disagree with Kennedy, that's probably where it will be, but that's also why it works.
Ultimately, compelling and groundbreaking are words that do not do this book justice, but it's both. Get it, read it, give it to someone else.
(A minor point but an important one if you are concerned about it being too academic. It reads like a story, which it is, and it must have driven the editor crazy with its almost conversational narrative style.
11 of 12 found the following review helpful:
Fantastic and Important BookOct 27, 2011
By Carol B. This is a fantastic and important book. On one level it is the memoir of a powerful idea that has begun to succeed against enormous odds. David Kennedy has been obsessed for more than 20 years with the tragedy of urban violence in the United States. Working at Harvard, he immersed himself in the literature of criminology. With grants of his own, he investigated Boston and listened to and translated the wisdom of street cops, probation officers, street workers, and gang members. He nurtured a focused, concentrated approach in cities across the country that dramatically reduced violent crime. As his thinking deepened and his colleagues broadened, the idea became more powerful, confronting racial mistrust and aligning the hopes of underserved communities and law enforcement. Like Paul Farmer addressed the problem of infectious disease in Tracy Kidder's Mountains Beyond Mountains, David Kennedy addresses urban violence from the perspective of the people affected. No one wants to live amid disease or violence. Both Farmer and Kennedy understand that the problems and the solutions are not merely technical, but profoundly human. Kennedy's book is a revelation for criminal justice, but the implications run deeper still.
Ted Heinrich
9 of 10 found the following review helpful:
This book should be required reading for urban police departmentsNov 01, 2011
By Anne Stephano Not only is this a terrific read, but it presents a startlingly simple idea for a solution to an intractable criminal justice problem that has long plagued cities and defied resolution. There are many moving parts, all hinging on the necessity of traditionally adversarial constituencies to work together. Over the past twenty five years, David Kennedy, with the collaboration of countess others, has doggedly pursued what he felt viscerally must happen to rectify the misguided if well intentioned efforts to bring violent crime in inner cities under control. It required the cooperation of police departments, leaders in the affected communities, the judicial system and the criminals themselves, no easy task but one that David has amazingly managed to achieve, gradually, painstakingly gaining the trust and willingness of each of these groups. This method has been successfully employed in over seventy cities and counting. Read this book. You'll be glad you did.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Here and ThereNov 13, 2011
By J. Doyle This is a strange and important book, one that is exactly right about policy and practice, but that also succeeds as a work of literature---in fact, succeeds because it is a work of literature. This is not a policy wonk's list of talking points; it is experimental non-fiction of a high order.
"Don't Shoot" might be the "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" of the War On Crime. Like T.E. Lawrence's idiosyncratic masterpiece, "Don't Shoot" deploys a highly intelligent and unorthodox author/protagonist---a renegade intellectual turned man of action---a strong narrative drive, acute and colorful character sketches, bravura descriptive passages, and an entirely original analysis. Like "Seven Pillars," it is a book about a journey to There: in this case to the crime-blighted minority inner city where the average white American never goes, mainly because the average white American feels pretty confident of what he would find if he did go.
But although Kennedy writes as an expert on There, his message home is that There is a socially constructed illusion. Kennedy mobilizes the traditions of the imperial adventure tale to show us what we should have known already: that everyone involved in the inner city crime crisis has more in common with each other than anyone involved has in common with anyone else. He shows that the cops, the shooters, the victims, the families, the communities, all start from the same human place. These are similar people trapped in extreme circumstances, not a radically and permanently different type of person. Kennedy shows how many features of the inner city wasteland of our public discourse---e.g., the "super-predators" who don't fear death and prison and value-free families that rear them--are figments of our public imagination or iatrogenic products of our own ham-handed anti-crime tactics. He shows why our blindness to these things has prevented real changes, and he shows what those changes can be. "Don't Shoot" provides a compelling argument that a carefully targeted anti-crime strategy that rigorously limits collateral damage is not only a moral imperative but a pragmatic necessity. It takes an impressive literary high-wire act to pull this off, but Kennedy pulls it off.
6 of 7 found the following review helpful:
A landmark bookOct 18, 2011
By Suzanne D Siegel This book is landmark and anyone who cares about gun violence in our cities should read it. It is not only a revolution in thought, it is a riveting read.
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