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9 Soc. & Soc. Work Rev. 227 (2025)
Youth Gangs between Crime Control and Social Inclusion: A Critical Examination of Competing Paradigms in Italy

handle is hein.journals/socwkv9 and id is 228 raw text is: 


                                                             Sociology and Social Work Review
                                                           Volume 9 (Issue 1)/2025 pp. 227-238


                                                                  DOI: 10.58179/SSWR9117
                                                       li ps://globalresearchpublishing com/ssw r/





        Youth Gangs between Crime Control and Social
        Inclusion: A Critical Examination of Competing
                             Paradigms in Italy

                             Pierluca  Massaro a *

                     a University of Bari Aldo Moro, Bari, Italy

Abstract
This article critically examines the competing paradigms that have shaped the  study,
representation, and governance of youth  gangs in Italy. Drawing on  a wide body  of
criminological, sociological, and ethnographic literature, the paper contrasts the dominant
criminological paradigm-rooted in classical   traditions of social control  and  risk
management-with the constructivist  and cultural approaches that emphasise the role of
social exclusion, identity negotiation, and resistance in the formation of youth street
groups. The so-called baby gang phenomenon  in Italy provides a revealing case study of
how  public discourse, media narratives, and official data converge to construct youth
groups as threats to public order. This construction, in turn, legitimises repressive policies
and  emergency  legislation, often at the expense of preventive and  inclusive social
measures.

Keywords:  Youth gang; Immigration; Criminalisation; Resistance; Constructivism; Social
control.


      1. Governance   through  Fear:  Media  Frames,   Migration, and  Youth   Gang
Narratives in Italy
      Unlike in the United  States, where the study of gangs has deep historical roots
dating back to the Chicago School  (Thrasher 1927), in Italy the phenomenon of youth
gangs has followed a different trajectory. For a long time, these groups were considered
alien to the native urban social fabric. Only in the early 2000s did the issue begin to attract
the attention of public discourse, institutions, and scientific research. This shift coincided
with  rising social alarm linked to migration processes and the  perception of urban
insecurity (Dal Lago 1999; Maneri 2009; Saitta and Palidda 2010).


Corresponding author. Pierluca Massaro. E-mail address: pierluca.massaro@uniba.it.

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