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2 Race & Just. 3 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/rcjstc2 and id is 1 raw text is: 

Article


                                                                     Race and justice
                                                                         2(1) 3-28
                                                                @ The Author(s) 2012
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              Fearome:Colo    ialDOl: 10. 1177/2153368711436014
Legacies, Racial                                                 http://ra.sagepub.com

Constructions, and Male                                                 SAGE

Adolescent Violence




Katherine Irwin' and Karen Umemoto2



Abstract
Violence and masculinity, as many criminologists have argued, are tightly coupled in
the United States. According to the current masculinity and crime perspectives, men
who  confront multiple oppressions (e.g., class, race, and political) are particularly apt
to use violence because, while marginalized men lack economic power, they possess
power  in terms of their gender, especially through the use or threat of violence. While
many  scholars acknowledge that racial oppression can contribute to the development
of violent masculine identities, the authors argue that race remains undertheorized in
prevailing explanations of masculine identities and violence. In this study, the authors
argue for further advancement of the colonial criminology framework to deepen our
understanding of the race-based inequalities leading up to violence. More specifically,
the authors analyze data collected from a 6-year ethnographic study of youth violence
among  Pacific Islander adolescents to illustrate the effects of the lasting legacy of colo-
nialism as well as the continuing salience of racial and ethnic identity formation
in explanations of violence, primarily involving Native Hawaiian and Samoan youths
in Hawai'i.


Keywords
colonial theory, criminological theories, juvenile delinquency, race and juvenile justice,
school violence, Asian/Pacific Islanders, race/ethnicity, code of the streets



Department of Sociology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
2 Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA

Corresponding Author:
Katherine Irwin, Department of Sociology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Saunders Hall 247, Honolulu, HI
96822, USA.
Email: Kirwin@hawaii.edu

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