An edition of How drug dealers settle disputes (2007)

How drug dealers settle disputes

violent and nonviolent outcomes

How drug dealers settle disputes
Angela Patrice Taylor, Angela ...
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Last edited by ImportBot
December 15, 2010 | History
An edition of How drug dealers settle disputes (2007)

How drug dealers settle disputes

violent and nonviolent outcomes

Publisher description: Dr. Angela Taylor's ethnographic study is the first to center on nonviolent outcomes in drug disputes and one of the few to highlight assaults (as opposed to homicides) in drug-selling violence. The research is based on extensive interviews with 25 street-level drug sellers in New York City. Dr. Taylor found that conflicts over money owed to dealers and the theft of their drug supplies were more likely to produce violent outcomes than disputes involving personal insults. Interestingly, conflicts over drug-selling territories--a notorious source of violence--were equally likely to be resolved nonviolently as violently. The availability of weapons during disputes and the presence of unequal numbers of partisans of the principals were associated with violent outcomes. Other factors militating against resorting to violence included mutual personal respect among the opposing parties and the high solvability quotient of the dispute. Extensive excerpts from Dr. Taylor's interviews with the drug sellers yield rich insights into the thoughts, emotions and world-views of her subjects. The study also expands and strengthens situational theories of violence.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
234

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Edition Availability
Cover of: How drug dealers settle disputes
How drug dealers settle disputes: violent and nonviolent outcomes
2007, Criminal Justice Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 225-229) and index.

Published in
Monsey, N.Y
Series
Qualitative studies in crime and justice -- v. 1

Classifications

Library of Congress
HV5833.N45 T39 2007

The Physical Object

Pagination
xvi, 234 p. ;
Number of pages
234

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL24535070M
ISBN 10
1881798763
ISBN 13
9781881798767
LCCN
2009277803
OCLC/WorldCat
182563702

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL15583110W

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December 15, 2010 Created by ImportBot initial import