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Examining the link between institutional and community violence: Toward a new cultural paradigm
Affiliation:1. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5T 3M7;2. Research Department of Epidemiology & Public Health, University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK;3. Department of Epidemiology & Public Health, University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK;1. Fédération régionale de recherche en psychiatrie et santé mentale/Regional federation for research in psychiatry and mental health (F2RSM Psy), Hauts-de-France, Saint-André-lez-Lille, France;2. Université de Lille, Centre lillois d’études et de recherches sociologiques et économiques/The Lille center for sociological and economic research and studies (Clerse), Villeneuve-d’Ascq, France;3. Université de Lille, Inserm, CHU Lille, U1172 - Lille Neuroscience & Cognition, 59000 Lille, France;4. Ministère de la Justice, Direction interrégionale des services pénitentiaires de Lille/Justice ministry. Interregional directorate of penal and correctional services in Lille, 59000 Lille, France;5. Centre national de ressources et de résilience Lille-Paris (CN2R), 59000 Lille, France;1. Établissement public de santé mentale, 15ter, rue Saint-Ouen, 14012 Caen, France;2. Service de psychiatrie, CHU de Caen, avenue de la Côte de Nacre, CS 30001, 14033 Caen cedex 9, France;3. UMR 6301 ISTCT, équipe ISTS, université de Caen–Basse-Normandie, Esplanade de la Paix, 14032 Caen, France
Abstract:New explanations of cultural processes are sought, in part, because existing hypotheses are at odds with new wave contemporary empirical findings. Namely, a growing body of scholarship calls into question the “racial invariance” hypothesis proposed by Sampson and Wilson (1995), particularly as it applies to Latinos. Based on these findings, it stands to reason that culture, in addition to structure, may be a property of communities that helps to explain racial/ethnic involvement in crime. This article explores the link between institutional and community violence, and then compares traditional perspectives on the influence of culture on violence (e.g. Wolfgang and Ferracuti’s subculture of violence) with newer, more dynamic conceptualizations of the cultural influence of violence in both institutional and community settings (e.g. Sampson and Bean’s relational theory of culture). The authors consider how both institutional and community violence may be explained using a new cultural paradigm, which moves beyond traditional views of “culture as values” to a new relational theory of “culture in action”. They present a model for understanding, and researching, culture that is based on the notion that value systems in institutions and neighborhoods influence one another. Offering examples from recent research on prison culture, they examine the key dimensions of this new cultural paradigm, which describes culture as “intersubjective, performative, cognitive, relational, and world-making”. The authors conclude that further examination of the reciprocal relationship between institutional and community culture is needed before we can begin to consider the policy implications of the “culture in action” paradigm.
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