On a Tuesday evening earlier this month, sociologist Victor Rios shared the results of his research about the relationship between the justice system and urban youth in front of a completely packed house at the UCSB MultiCultural Center Theater. His research, conducted both in Oakland (where he’s from) and in Santa Barbara (where he’s been a UCSB professor since 2006), all seemed to suggest that the justice system, as it currently stands, is training urban youth to have a destructive relationship with authority. But this problem isn’t one where causation is easy to identify and fix.
Early in the presentation, Rios shared stills from a video in which a young man in a school hallway is confronted by a group of rival gang members, restrained dramatically, and taken to the ground. That was far from the first incident of this nature that the student had been involved in, and he was eventually expelled from the school for his repeated association with gangs and “gang culture.”
“That student was me,” Rios revealed shortly thereafter. The footage was from a PBS documentary called School Colors, in which filmmakers followed Rios and other “urban youths” in order to document their gang-related trials and tribulations. Rios eventually overcame these trials, something that he says the PBS cameras bore witness to. “But they didn’t show that,” he remarks. The system, it seems to Rios, isn’t as interested in stories of reformation as they are stories of violence.
Rios went on to share the details of what he calls the “systematic stripping of dignity” that youths, specifically African Americans and Latinos, endure on multiple fronts. The projection of stereotypes in the media and the reinforcement of those stereotypes in the news put the youth at dramatic disadvantages. More significant to Rios, though, is law enforcement’s treatment of the youth. From a very young age, the police seem inclined to establish themselves as adversaries. They stop, handcuff, and frisk kids, intimidating them and threatening them with physical violence. Rios’s only admission that the system may have some advantages is that it’s motivated so many to educate themselves with hopes of fixing it, a group that seemingly includes himself.
Rios’s testimony on the police in urban areas is tough to argue with. When it comes to matters of law enforcement, Rios’s voice alternated between a person who’s experienced these things firsthand and a researcher who’s seen these scenes play out many times. He served up a mix of anecdotes from his past and from his time doing research. He told stories about a police officer bashing in the head of his cousin with a baton, a cadre of “rogue” cops nicknaming themselves “The Riders” in the Bay Area, and a particular officer who used to give Rios and his friends a head start before he’d chase them down and give them a “beat down.” That particular officer earned the nickname “Track Star.” The nicknames and stories that the youth shared about the police were particularly telling of their relationship to authority, or “the system.” Moments after this, some of the young people in the audience from Santa Barbara could be heard talking about “the black car.”
The audience in the theater was composed of a mix between UCSB students, faculty, and young people that one could reasonably conclude were the “youths” that Rios is speaking about. During the question-and-answer portion of the presentation, one young man with a tattoo below his left eye asked why the police aren’t considered a gang. Rios jumped backward in his slideshow to a picture of police officers at the S.B. County Fair, where he’d seen the cops single out a 12-year-old boy, put him in cuffs, and then make him remove his shirt so they could search for tattoos. “A gang,” Rios answered, “is defined as a group that share a common appearance … who band together for shared protection and profit.” Rios’s response was pretty clear. The whole crowd cheered and laughed.
Where things get complicated is Rios’s cut-and-dry identification of who’s responsible for the “school-to-prison” pipeline. He did not address — at least in his presentation — a lot of other factors that may be as relevant as the posture of law enforcement, such as problems stemming from drug abuse, unemployment, domestic issues, and the upside-down education system. But over the last few years, Rios’s work has garnered a lot of attention and a lot of praise for good reason: He’s boldly gone where most researchers or academics either have not or will not go. And clearly, it’s not something he takes lightly. His passion seems to come from a lifelong picture of these issues and struggles, and that passion is contagious.



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In the interest of accountability it would be interesting to hear more about "the black car." The definition of a gang is interesting and even more interesting is the limited idea of what a gang is. We really need to start at the top, with the adults, if we want to reform.
DonMcDermott (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 7:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The "Black Car"? That is the unmarked Ford Crown Vic with the bevy of communicational antenna array, Dark tinted windows and blacked-out chrome, search light and push bars.
It's a car used to roll-up on would-be offenders and get the jump on them before they scurry into the darkness like roaches when the light come on. Here in the DC Metro Area, these cars are all over the place, often occupied by ICE and DEA but also FBI, CIA, Wash DC Metro PD.
Nothing really new but often refered to as The Black Car.
dou4now
dou4now (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 8:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Is Rios a professor or a Latino activist? Seriously. Comparing the police to a gang? You should be ashamed of yourself to allow that type of comparison to go on with applause from the crowd without making the distinction between the two. Rios has lost all credibility in my mind and is nothing more than a social acitivist, not a sociologist.
rukidding (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 9:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
the dingy deputies are a gang. with no accountability. they act with impunity. ill informed would be a very complimentary way of explaining them. anyone ever heard of a fusion center? if not, find out. you'll see whats in the black car. not just a 19 year old nerd with a 9mm or a narc car. almost all my friends are latino or whatever-- they are of mexican descent. they are native americans. and the amerikkka natives get forgotten. the violence etc... is horrible on reservations. if u think a res is a fancy casino, pull your head out. california isnt a US state. were mexico. so get with it.
wes (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 12:38 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Rukidding: "Is Rios a professor or a Latino activist?"
"His research, conducted both in Oakland (where he’s from) and in Santa Barbara (where he’s been a UCSB professor since 2006)"
I'm willing to say that while the former, the latter also applies.
"Seriously. Comparing the police to a gang?"
Well, after all, it is UCSB an ivory tower bastion of liberalism, the same 1 that compared Israeli Defense Forces to nazi SS storm troopers.
Again, ivory tower academics in the humanities & arts lean heavily to the left, that's where the majority of their support base comes fom, they'd be stupid not to. Why bite the hand that feeds?
W/ that said, their general sentiment is against "The Man" & that includes anything NOT far left.
No surprise here folks, move along, nothing to see, just another day/nite in liberal utopia, aka UCSB humanities & arts. Oh, & wes, ah, never mind, you said a mouthful :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 12:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I wonder if Rios will address the fact that Mexican children who try to do well in school are ostracized and harrassed by the gang kids.
Until ALL races are willing to be self-critical, nothing positive can result.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
November 25, 2011 at 7:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)
The writer seems awfully enamored with Senor Rios, considering that multiple claims are made in this poorly written article: that his explanations are irrefutable, AND that causation is not easily found AND that "he did not address... a lot of other factors that may be relevant...". Which is it?
Rios is another in a long line of self loathing racists that DO NOT address why the overwhelming majority of Latino's and all racially centric groups produce kids that DO NOT turn to crime and become productive members of society.
Even in this ass backward apologist culture we're creating in Santa Barbara becoming a gang banger for Latino's is the exception not the rule. Rios would have us believe becoming a deviant is inevitable.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 26, 2011 at 5:13 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Hey hank and bc-Epiphany Alert! This guy uses his academic position to get the hot, UCSB gangster chicks like Maria.
There's a method to his racist madness...
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 26, 2011 at 8:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Italiansurg is onto something here! No wonder I never had the hot chola chicks, as a Latino I wasn't in a gang or made excuses for gangs. I lost out... NOT! :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
November 27, 2011 at 12:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)
It is impossible that you were not in a gang Hank so stop with the denial. Remember the oppression you are under as a Latino makes it nearly inevitable.
As for your inability to snag a chola, I will offer no speculation.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 27, 2011 at 5:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Wait a second my Mediterrenean friend. Shouldn't you have affiliations to La Cosa Nostra? According to culturo-ethno-pologists, because of your Italian ethnicity, you should be a mobster. So, how ya doin? HAHAHA! :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
November 27, 2011 at 10:18 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Everyone knows that sociologists cannot be activists at the same time.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
November 27, 2011 at 1:07 p.m. (Suggest removal)
John_A: "Everyone knows that sociologists cannot be activists at the same time."
If a sociologist skews the data of the research to further a pesonal social agenda then said sociologist is also an activist.
Kind of like the "progressives" that skew reality so that they can say they're Progressives. Just doesn't fly :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
November 27, 2011 at 9:52 p.m. (Suggest removal)
It's funny about the whole Mafia thing in America. Amazingly, despite being stereotyped off and on, I did not feel personally brutalized by the flagrant racial profiling of all Americans of Italian descent(obvious sarcasm).
The truth is that the Mafia is confined to Sicilia which is distinctly different from the rest of Italy. There are different cartels in Napoli, but they're not as traditionally violent and have zero presence in Italy north of Napoli. Any real Italian will tell you that being Siciliano or Napolitano is an impenetrable cultural difference between the rest of Italy. The food is distinct. The dialect(s) are distinct. The cultural fabric is distinct.
In America the combination of dwindling numbers of criminals immigrating from Sicily due to border enforcement(any answers for Mexican illegals here, apologists?) and the government crack down due to RICO(wow, you mean Mexicans aren't being singled out like they constantly tell us?) put an end to to most of the American Mafia, thank God.
Hey wait a minute Hank, I think we need a Mediterranean Studies Program at every public institution of higher learning to stop the travesty of ignorance and educate the masses! Every person from the Mediterranean that is a lowlife needs to have a public excuse to explain their lack of excellence!
I'm beginning to feel victimized and brutalized...
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 28, 2011 at 6:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Italiansurg: "Hey wait a minute Hank, I think we need a Mediterranean Studies Program at every public institution of higher learning to stop the travesty of ignorance and educate the masses! Every person from the Mediterranean that is a lowlife needs to have a public excuse to explain their lack of excellence! I'm beginning to feel victimized and brutalized..."
Got your back brother, I got some Sicilian in my lineage, need some excuses to screw up every now & then. Un DiTo FiNo HoMie! :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
November 28, 2011 at 11:50 a.m. (Suggest removal)
What about ME? I got some Irish Catholic in my background and you know how they were treated here for many years. (Remember the line from Blazing Saddles "we don't want the Irish"?)
I got Assyrian on my mom's side and because she and her family faced racism I have damged self-esteem.
I want to get in on this action, and I may start by holding my breath until I turn blue; then you'll be sorry.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
November 28, 2011 at 9:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I already tried holding my breath in order to make DM write something intelligent. It did not work.
The Irish and Italians are in this together; both were treated far worse than current immigrants and they learned to dislike each other when they competed for employment.
You're in. OK, now we have Irish, Italian, and Cuban. That's it, let's exclude everyone else!
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 29, 2011 at 4:52 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Ignorance reigns once again on an INDY comment thread. The anti-intellectualism displayed in these pages (not to be confused with uninformed) is a disgrace and an embarassment to the greater SB community. The gangs of right wing haters hiding under pseudonyms that dominate these pages on this and other local news sites thankfully are not an adequate reflection of the community as a whole; just a slice of people who do nothing all day but spew hate and ignorance.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
November 30, 2011 at 2:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Thank goodness we have your giant brain as a guiding light through the dark abyss of ignorance and hate, Ken.
Or, is your inability to deal with reality or practical solutions sorta' like a car in the fog without tail lights...CRASH!
OK, I'll give in and let legal Latino's and all legal immigrants into our Irish/Italian/Cuban clubette. Oops, Cubans are Latino's so that horse is already out of the barn...I guess this means that Asians, who have somehow overcome their past problems here can join too. But since they have excelled and don't cry "victimhood" all the time they may shun our new consortium.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
December 1, 2011 at 12:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
LOLOLOL!!!!!
Lets see...we`ve got "Gang-Zars", "Gang Experts" Gang Counselors" "Gang Injunctions" "Gang Specialists"....
And GANGS.....notice the last word there?....
Every time I go to the gym,the guys there look so tough!
There are martial-arts schools on every corner & "Tap-out" stickers on every window..SB cops are real bad-assess right?...so how do we have teen & pre-teen punks killing people?...."There are no bad students,only bad teachers"..
Pat Morita...rip
PeterPeli (anonymous profile)
January 19, 2012 at 1:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)