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Topic 3:
The Gender Composition of Gangs
Although
the literature portrays female gang members as little more than sex
objects, the role of teenage girls in gangs is evolving. They now
are the perpetrators of serious crimes.
(Molidor,
1996, page)
Field Note: Marsha used to work with a female youth gang called the
Sisters. She described them as "a very tough and violent gang of about twelve African-American
girls. The members of the Sisters were all alike - same hairdos,
same clothes, same makeup, same walk. The girls got together
in junior high school. I think they're tougher than male gang
members." Marsha was referring to how the girl gang
members intimidate and interact with other people as compared to the
male gang members with whom she works.
Every now and then Marsha saw members of the
Sisters standing around after school as they watched other girls
participate in Double Dutch - jumping two skipping ropes
alternately. After a few weeks of this, Marsha introduced some
of the Sisters to the sport and was eventually successful in altering their
behavior [becoming less involved in deviance and criminality].
Marsha told me the Sisters enjoyed
playing together at Double Dutch and enjoyed its physical and
competitive nature. They formed a team
and, in time,
began to win trophies and traveled extensively to
compete. According to Marsha, "Most of the Sisters are married now.
They're mothers, employed, and no longer in trouble with the
law."
Marsha also got the Sisters interested in 4H
activities. She took members of the gang to visit farms. She said "They saw things they would never have seen
where they lived in the inner-city. The new experience,
the things they saw, and the fact that someone cared enough to share
this experience played a role in changing their attitudes,"
which, Marsha believes, led to positive behavioral changes.
She said "Just showing them another way of life
really helped since they knew no other way of life before that. How does someone have choices when there are none
to make?"
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One of the least
understood aspects of the American gang scene is the role of females in
them. Most available research on the subject concludes that most gangs are
male-dominated but that the presence of females in the world of gangs is
increasing.
In surveys of youth in a wide range of cities ... the
proportion of self-identified gang members who were female ranged from 8 to
38 percent, and the proportion of females surveyed who claimed gang
membership ranged from 9 to 22 percent. (Moore
and Hagedorn, 2001, page)
In a study of 5,935 eighth
graders in 42 schools located in 11 different cities, 617 youths
self-reported themselves gang members - 38% of them were females. The
researchers reported "Female gang members committed the same variety of
offenses as male gang members, but at a slightly lower frequency." (Esbensen
and Winfree, 1998)
The role of girls in gangs is changing - they
are younger, tougher, and are just as violent, sometimes more, than their
male counterparts. More troubling, their children are immersed in
the chaos and violence of gangs from birth, passing down the gang legacy
to yet another generation. Although still a fraction of overall gang
membership - the CCC [Chicago Crime Commission] estimates between
16,000 and 20,000 female gang members and associates in Chicago.
(Chicago Crime Commission,
1999, page)
| Field Note: One
police gang unit supervisor said that, "In this city, it's getting to
be that there are as many females involved in gangs as there are
males." |
"Agencies responding to the 1998 National Youth Gang Survey reported that
... females accounted for 8 percent of gang members (see table
14 below)." (1998 National Youth Gang Survey,
2000, page)
Using
the Survey's estimate that there were 840,500 gang members in the United
States in 1998, this means there may be as many as 67,240 females
involved in gangs. Looking at that number, and the Chicago Crime
Commission's estimate of 16,000 to 20,000 female gang members in Chicago
alone, the 67,240 estimate may be conservative.
There is growing interest in female gang members among gang researchers and those who want to provide prevention and
intervention programs for them. Their concern is
well taken as the participation of females in gang activity appears to be increasing in some jurisdictions.
Much of the evidence for this is anecdotal since collection
of data from the police is somewhat skewed. Police, and the courts,
are less likely to attribute gang membership to females which may result in an under reporting of their participation in gangs.
Contrary to previous
studies, a large percentage of female gang members reported sharing equal
status in their gangs with male members. (Lurigio,
et al., 1998) Female gang
members were significantly more likely than males to have experienced
bullying [in school] and to have subsequently engaged in bullying
behavior. (Holmes
and Brandenburg-Ayres, 1998)
Are female gang members
simply an addendum to male gangs or do they have a significant role to play
in male-dominated gangs? Are there all-female gangs? It
has been estimated that "less than 2 percent (1.76 percent) of all
gangs in the United States in 1998 were female dominated." (1998
National Youth Gang Survey, 2000, page)
| Field Note:
The director of a community-based alternative sentencing program for
delinquent youth noted that most of his gang clients are males,
however, "There are lots of girls in town who claim being a
Blood or a Crip. But they don't exhibit gang behavior in our
program. Many of them are pregnant - little girls being
used by the male gang members. They're fourteen, fifteen years
old. We have a sixteen year old girl who is pregnant and
already has two children." |
Jody Miller (Miller,
2001) conducted her gang research in St. Louis and found, of the
22 gangs she studied, 14% had a membership in which females were a majority. Their level of participation
in a gang varies, sometimes significantly, from one community to
another. The National Youth Gang Survey ( 2000)
indicated less than 2
percent of all gangs are female dominated but Miller found a community in
which 7 times that many were female dominated. (Miller,
2001) This is yet another reason
why communities wishing to address their own gang situation must use current
local data. National data
can be misleading when designing programs to deal
with the gang situation in one's own community.
Over the past several
decades the role of females in gangs has become only slightly clearer as
research continues on this subject. Using a sample of 51 female and 106 male
gang members, Moore and Hagedorn (1996)
found that, in their later lives, females who joined a gang came from
"different kinds of families than boys." They found that "boys were more
likely to come from conventional working-class families, whereas girls were
more likely to come from 'underclass' families and also from abusive
families."
In its 1998 survey of gangs, the
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency (2000)
learned females make up a larger percentage of all gang members in
small cities and in suburban and rural settings (see Table 14 above).
Females may form "sister" gangs which are auxiliary to
male-dominated gangs, become members of mixed-sex gangs, or form their own
female-dominated gangs.
Walter
Miller classified female gangs into three types: (1) female auxiliary
gangs affiliated with male gangs, (2) mixed-sex gangs with both male and
female members, and (3) independent or autonomous female gangs ... Without
doubt, the rarest of gangs involving females were independent, autonomous
female gangs. (Curry
and Decker, 1998, p. 99)
On an
individual basis, many females become involved in gangs through
relationships with boyfriends or brothers ... female members of mixed-sex
gangs become involved in delinquent or criminal activity through their
association with the males in the gang. (ibid.,
1998, p. 108)
The same report reveals females are a larger proportion
of the gang population in the Northeast region of the United States than
anywhere else in the nation (see Table 15 below). (ibid,
page)
We need to be concerned about young girls and
gangs. Since they serve a purpose in male-dominated gangs, they will
be sought out for membership or association in a gang. And there are young
girls forming their own gangs - for profit, for protection, and for other
reasons as well. Once in a
gang, their behavior becomes more like the male gang members' behavior.
Dana Nurge, an assistant professor at
Northeastern University's College of Criminal Justice, has interviewed
school administrators, street workers, law-enforcement officials, and
female gang members about the growth of girl gangs. Today's female gangs,
Nurge reports, may evolve from informal cliques -- whose criminal activity
is limited to petty theft and assault -- to more-structured organizations
that adopt traditional male-gang attributes such as colors, tattoos, hand
signals, initiation rituals, oaths, and regulations. Although girl gangs
shy away from such male-gang trademarks as graffiti and gunplay, police
say, they do deal drugs, beat people up, and carry weapons -- especially
knives, razors, and bleach spray bottles, which they use like mace. 'Make no mistake, these girls are not girl
scouts,' says Lieutenant Gary French, commander of the Boston
Police's Youth Violence Strike Force. 'They are not as organized as
established male gangs, but they are getting close.' (McNaught,
1999, page)
While only a minority of gangs are female dominated, most
male-dominated gangs have some role for women to play. They may
be used as sex objects by the male members and/or as accomplices in crimes the males commit. As sex objects, they are used to satisfy the
sexual urges of male gang members and as a means for proving one's
manhood. Initiation ceremonies for some females include being
"sexed in" - a process which requires the female to have
intercourse with one or more of the male gang members. The use of the females as
sexual objects varies according to the type or ethnicity of the gang.
Using female gang members as accomplices in crime was
clarified for me as I observed females carrying drugs for male gang members
in the process of selling those drugs. Once the male gang member and
the drug buyer had negotiated a deal, the female brought the drugs to the
transaction and handed them to the buyer. The male gang members
involved in these transactions did not touch the drugs. This was done so that, if caught, the male gang member could disavow any
wrongdoing. The reasoning for this behavior is that if
a female is caught in a drug deal, she will not be dealt with as harshly by
the police or courts as would a male caught in the same
situation. The same scenario was revealed when it came to
carrying guns.
The crimes
in which most female gang members participate are either violent crimes
or drug offenses. According to Moore and Hagedorn (2001):
Many, but not all, female gang members are
involved in some kind of delinquency or criminality. Youth surveys
consistently show that delinquency rates of female gang members are lower
than those of male gang members but higher than those of non-gang females
and even non-gang males.
In general, female gang members commit fewer violent
crimes than male gang members and are more inclined to property crimes and
status offenses.
Some might conclude from these data that female gang
members are not violent enough to be of concern. However, an 11-city
survey of eighth graders undertaken in the mid-1990’s found that more
than 90 percent of both male and female gang members reported having
engaged in one or more violent acts in the previous 12 months.
The researchers found that 78 percent of female
gang members reported being involved in gang fights, 65 percent reported
carrying a weapon for protection, and 39 percent reported attacking
someone with a weapon. These and similar findings prompted the authors
of this study to recommend that gang prevention and intervention efforts
be directed specifically at females. (Moore
and Hagedorn, 2001, page)
Male Gang Members'
Perceptions of Females in
Gangs
One of the clearest statements about how male gang members perceive of
females in gangs was written by Moore and Hagedorn (Moore
and Hagedorn, 2001, page).
In Los Angeles, a large random sample of male and female Mexican American
gang members was asked about the role of women in the gang. Half of the male members claimed that female members
were 'possessions.' This response not only referred to the females’
sexual exploitation but also reflected the males’ general need to be in
charge. The other half of the male members felt that female members were
respected and treated like family. (About two-thirds of the female members
vehemently denied that they were treated like possessions.)
In San Antonio, where there are many Mexican American gangs but few
female gangs or gang members, most females who associate with male gang
members are respected. But 'hoodrats' - females involved in 'frequent
partying, drug using, participation in illegal activities and multiple
sexual encounters' - are not deemed worthy of respect.
Although male gang members may exaggerate their sexual domination over
female members, there are reports from females that they have been sexually
exploited by males within the gang. In San Francisco, females from an
immigrant Salvadoran gang reportedly often were sexually victimized by male
gang members, although this rarely happened in a nearby Mexican American
gang.
Sexual abuse and exploitation by male gang members were also reported by
some subsets of female gang members in Columbus, OH; Phoenix, AZ ; Chicago; and Los Angeles.
(All of these studies involved African American, Mexican American, and
Puerto Rican females.) Some of these reports may have been from females who were only
marginal to the gang.
In Milwaukee, for example, females controlled admission to their gang (a
female auxiliary to the male gang), but female “wannabes” seeking to
become members thought that males controlled admission. The male
members tricked some female wannabes into group sex by telling them it was
an initiation ritual. It was not, and females who participated in the
group sex did not become members of the gang. A similar situation existed in Phoenix.
Evidence of sexual exploitation of female gang members at home and within
their gangs is one reason for considering female gang membership a serious
social concern."
This brings us to a consideration of the racial and ethnic composition of
gangs.
Next
Additional
Resources:
Women and Criminal Justice has posted a number of useful links to
additional
information on girls/women and delinquency, crime and gangs.
Read an
online book entitled
The
Invisible Boy: Revisioning The Victimization of Male Children and Teens.
It's a fascinating book by Frederick
Mathews, Community Psychologist, Central Toronto Youth
Services and prepared for The National Clearinghouse on Family Violence,
Canada.
George W. Knox, Director of the National
Gang Research Center, wrote a report in 2001 entitled
Female Gang Members and the
Rights of Children.
Mark Fleisher is one of the most
recognized gang researchers in America today. You can read a review of his
1998 book Dead
End Kids: Gang Girls and the Boys They Know. From the Center for the study of Criminology at the University of Toronto,
see a bibliography
of books, chapters, websites, and articles on girls and gangs.
For more data on female gangs see Female
Gangs: A Focus on Research
or a
number of articles on female juvenile delinquency offered by National
Criminal Justice Reference Service. The American Diabetes Association has a
very interesting article on
the increase in the
number of girls joining gangs and their increasingly powerful role in gangs.
Understanding
and Responding to Girls' Delinquency, "Violence by Teenage Girls: Trends
and Context," is an excellent online resource concerning young female
delinquents and those who get involved in gangs.
Read about
female gangs in America
or visit the Web site of Robert Walker,
gang specialist. He offers several interesting links to information on girls
and gangs on his site at GangsOrUs.
If you'd like to learn more about girls and violence, read "An
Overview of Research on Girls and Violence."
For
an up-close look at four female gangs, read Eight
Ball Chicks, by Gini Sikes. And for a closer look at
girls
and violence, see an article by the same name written by Jeanne Weiler
for the Institute for Urban and Minority Education.
From
An Urban Ethnography of Latino Street Gangs in Los Angeles and Ventura
County (CA) you can learn
more about Hispanic girl gang members.
If you'd like to learn more about 4H, you
can visit their Web site.
© 2002
Michael K. Carlie
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be
reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in
writing from the author and copyright holder - Michael K. Carlie.
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