

An edition of The street is my home (1999)
youth and violence in Caracas
By Patricia C. Márquez
Publish Date
1999
Publisher
Stanford University Press
Language
eng
Pages
276
Description:
What does it mean to be a child or an adolescent growing up on the streets or in a state institution? How do children define their everyday lives in the midst of global processes? This ethnographic study situates childhood and adolescence as social forms within the changing family and political structures of the complex urban world of Caracas, Venezuela. The presence of youngsters on the streets of Caracas embodies social contradictions at the national level, and this book discusses how these contradictions are played out in an oil-producing nation afflicted with hyperinflation generalized corruption, the deterioration of public services, increasing poverty, and violence. Vivid life stories told by street children themselves portray their relations with family and friends, as well as with people they encounter: police officers, journalists, social workers, and passersby at their local hangouts. The book also describes and analyzes the justice system and institutions for minors, illustrating the constant failures to respond to, contain, or lessen youth violence.
subjects: Youth, Street children, Social control, Social conditions, Violence, Violence urbaine, Adolescent, Jeune, Delinquance juvenile, Controle social, Conditions sociales, Enfants vagabonds, Enfant de la rue, Jeunesse, Condition sociale, Venezuela, social conditions, Venezuela, economic conditions, Youth, latin america, Children and violence