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This book offers a critical and empirical examination of gang life, using an intersectional framework considering race, class, gender, and other characteristics. The book reexamines mainstream definitions of gangs, identifies myths and misconceptions, and presents the complex subcultural or countercultural realities of gang members and their associates. Special attention is given to the importance of  structural violence experienced by gang members and their communities.  This book also interrogates how mainstream gang research is complicit in the oppression of marginalized individuals who join gangs.

Assembling contributions from leading experts involved in gang research and the investigation of street gang culture, this book provides a perspective often missing in the conversation around gangs. Direct input from current and former gang members provides a window into the lived experiences of gang life—a picture more accurate and useful than that afforded by the privileged lens often used in gang research.  Reliance on an intersectional approach fosters a non-pathological and critical look at gangs and their members.

Critical and Intersectional Gang Studies

is intended for students and scholars involved in the study of gangs, delinquency, and subcultural theory and will serve as a reference for researchers who wish to utilize a progressive, critical, and intersectional approach to study the impacts of gangs.



This book offers a critical and empirical examination of gang life, using an intersectional framework considering race, class, gender, and other characteristics.

Chapter 1: Introduction

Section 1: Gang Definition

Chapter 2: "Gang Aint In My Dictionary": Utilizing Insider Perspectives to
Develop a Critical Gang Definition

Jennifer M. Ortiz

Chapter 3: Demystifying Alt-Right Gangs: Are White Power Groups Cut from the
Same Cloth as Conventional Gangs?

Matthew Valasik & Shannon Reid

Chapter 4: [ Folk]tales of different peoples¹: Transgressing gang definitions
and historical ties

Brian Cabral & Sarah Bruno

Section 2: Critical Reflections on Gang Studies

Chapter 5: Towards a Decolonial Imaginary to Reexamine and Redefine
Mainstream Definitions of Gangs and Gang Members in America

Amy Andrea Martinez

Chapter 6: MS-13, Gang Studies, and Crimes of the Powerful

Kenneth Sebastian Leon & Maya Barack

Chapter 7: Evolution of the Folk Devil: Deconstructing Claims about Hybrid
Gangs

Christian Bolden & Renee Lamphere

Section 3: Intersectional Gang Studies

Chapter 8: Gang as a Proxy for Race: How the Criminal Justice System uses
gang to reinforce oppression in minority communities

Jennifer M. Ortiz

Chapter 9: "I wanted to be the first Mexican Mafia female member:" An
Intersectional Criminological Analysis of Chicana Gang Members in California

Marisa D. Salinas & Xuan Santos

Chapter 10: LGBTQ Gang Members Intersectional Identities and Experiences

Vanessa Panfil
Jennifer M. Ortiz is an associate professor at The College of New Jersey. Dr. Ortiz earned her PhD in criminal justice from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Her research interests center on structural violence within the criminal justice system, with a focus on prison gangs and reentry post-incarceration. Ortizs most recent scholarship has been published in The Prison Journal, Corrections: Policy, Practice, and Research and Criminal Justice Review. Ortiz currently serves as an executive board member for Mission Behind Bars and Beyond, a Kentucky-based non-profit reentry organization and as Division Chair for the Division of Convict Criminology of the American Society of Criminology.