On Demand
A Sociologist’s Turn as a Gang Leader
Monday, January 14, 2008
For seven years, sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh studied a Chicago crack-dealing gang from the inside and found a complex, tightly organized society bound by friendship and force. His new book is Gang Leader for a Day: A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets.
Event: Sudhir Venkatesh will be speaking and signing books
Monday, January 14 at 7 pm
Upper West Side Barnes & Noble
2289 Broadway (at 82nd Street)
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Wow, no nod to "Tally's Corner" nor "The Corner".
this is one of the most interesting interviews ever.
Gang leadership was not the only leadership or government system in place in the housing projects at that time. There were other grassroots and citywide organizations involved with these communities and not everyone was a gang member.
Excellent. But please, let the guset talk, dont do the *I interview*... its very sad when Leonard is not in the studio.
Get rid of projects and legalize drugs
So this is the man who invented ethnography.
This Lisa Birnbach is torture to listen to. It's terrible to miss Leonard for even one day, but I'd prefer dead air to this.
Aw, I think she's fine!
Dear Lisa Birnbach, you are a very good interviewer. In fact, I find you are as good as Mr. Lopate.
Lisa did an excellent job in her interview with Sudhir. It was clear that she cares, and caring is the crucial ingredient needed for the solving of serious, difficult, and dangerous problems from the local to the global levels. Because of her caring, Lisa will succeed, where others will not, in interviewing people who actually know what they are talking about. Sudhir is a good example to follow for all those people in the worlds of academia/"Think Tanks", policy, and leadership positions, of the importance of caring, AND GETTING INVOLVED, in order to TRULY understand what can never be learned in a book, if policy for the most serious problems in the world is going to be made (and carried out) that has a chance of succeeding. Good luck to them both. Don't give up.
Very nice and great research, but amazing ego to not contextualize his reserach in the long line of urban ethnography in Anthropology and Sociology (out of the Chicago school no less...) -- what about Selling Crack in the Barrio, Philippe Bourgois to start with and Tally's corner etc etc...
Sad the lack of collegiality of a sociologist in academia...
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