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Community Education and Crime Prevention
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30 May 2009

Scholars in various disciplines are recommending comprehensive measures to solve multiple societal as well as individual problems. The philosophy of "community education" has been overlooked but is a workable, comprehensive approach to addressing crime. As used in this book, community education is a philosophy, process, and program comprised of three overriding and interrelated elements: community empowerment, community problem-solving, and the effort to involve all community members in the pursuit of lifelong learning. The Hyde Park neighborhood in St. Louis has one of the highest rates of reported drug sales and high rates of homicide, robbery, aggravated assault, arson, and burglary. The community lays claim to several crime-inducing variables including population loss, a high percentage of population shift resulting in a higher percentage of black population and boarded-up housing units, a high rate of unemployment, a very low per capita income and a high percentage of citizens living below the poverty line, and a high percentage of female-headed households. Nevertheless, the people of Hyde Park are participating in a crime prevention approach that is applicable to all communities. Insights to urban life and problem solving are provided by community members, covering such topics as policing and how it can be improved. These insights and others offered by the author are supported by theories and philosophies found in the literature. In the process of solving their own problems, community members involve themselves in lifelong learning activities and leadership development. Written in a style that is appealing to the general public as well as academics, it is of special interest to educators, community leaders, criminologists, academics in urban affairs and sociology, social workers, law enforcement agents, and politicians.
Part I. Confronting Foreground Causes of Criminal Behavior
Chapter 1. A Theory of Crime Causation.
Chapter 2. Community Crime Prevention.
Chapter 3. The Hyde Park Neighborhood.
Chapter 4. Policing in the Hyde Park Neighborhood: Racial Bias, Political Pressures, and Community Policing.
Chapter 5. Hyde Park Crime: Prevention Efforts and Their Effects.
Part II. Confronting Background Causes of Criminal Behavior: A Community Education Approach
Chapter 6. What Is Community Education?.
Chapter 7. Community Education Models: A Comparison.
Chapter 8. The Friedens Haus Coalition.
Chapter 9. Political Awareness and Action.
Chapter 10. Community Empowerment.
Chapter 11. Inclusiveness.
Chapter 12. Citizen Councils.
Chapter 13. Leadership Development.
Chapter 14. Community Organization and Problem-Solving: The Economic Problem.
Chapter 15. The Housing Problem.
Chapter 16. Interagency Cooperation.
Chapter 17. Assessing Needs, Planning, and Evaluating.
Chapter 18. Lifelong Learning.
Chapter 19. Leadership for Community Education.
Chapter 20. Summary.