Thursday, May 16, 2019
Operation fly trap
However, all of this wouldnt be possible without the help she received from the Harry Guggenheim universe award. That grant helped her begin her worldwork in 2005. Her fieldwork was conducted in the Pueblos neighborhood in Los Angles, this is where she got inside information from the gang members themselves. She too studied from the Los Angles Police Department (LARD), here she befriended a couple of FBI agents that were in charge of physical process tent-fly Trap. All of this fieldwork paved her way In composing a very objective book.She received severally received both sides of the Issue and wrote this book to give her post of view on the subject. In her Ellwood she would ask the effects of the justice department and the consequence it has on the community and family of the criminals involved. The time she spent on the inside, with the community of the gangs and the lives they lead, would lead Phillips to question both the success of this operation and the methods used to conduct it (Phillips 175).Los Angles was struck with dramatic scotch times, the economy was unraveling In every way possible. The economy was hurt by the 011 crisis, depreciating international dollar, diminish of union jobs, bifurcation of the manufacturing sector, ND an unchanging education system (Phillips 7). All of these factors would be reasons of why a vertical working class citizen would turn to dealing drugs, being a member of a gang, and/or victimization drugs. Drug mvirtuosoy was easy money as one would say.You could make stacks of money fast, with microscopical effort most of the time. The warm part was not getting caught. With the Increase In drug use happening In Los Angles was the same Increase In prison sentences. It got so bad that Incarceration became Californians mo one industry. It would grow to employ the largest umber of great deal in the state (Phillips). One of the other definitive factors that have to do with the increase in incarcerations was the f act that the state of California waged a war on drugs.The Federal Bureau of Prisons ( whack) went from housing 21 ,539 Inmates In 1978 to 217,444 in 2011, making drug offenders 55% of the BOP population (Phillips 8). Although part of this prison rate Is In fact due to the aggressive policing and harsh sentencing the criminals were given. This do Phillips think and wonder if all of this was part of the solution or Just part of the problem. From her extensive field work she goes on to say that the way the LAP approached the drug problem was in fact producing one of the problems they were trying so hard to prevent. Here she needed to take the next step, on the inside. She began this step by living in the neighborhood of Pueblos, which was run by the African American and Hispanic race. She luckily befriended a local named Ben Kaplan and lived there with his family. From there she was able to get a first hand view point the ever so popular drug environment. She was also able to see diff erent sides of the spectrum like how he environment affected the families and communities alike. How the laws and actions of the police affected them as well.There use of surveillance, through wiretaps and confidential informants, having a forbid impact on the lives of the community. She figures out how the families are shaped through this involvement in crime. Phillips research in all of this goes to prove how unbiased her book really is, she practiced true reflexivity. All of her facts are hard facts that she went and lived first hand. She witnessed drug deals, witnessed people snorting cocaine, and dinettes the wiretaps that were given to drug dealers.All of this information she writes from is purely unbiased facts, writing from an etc perspective, her way of co- existing with the people, sitting back and observing them, was how she approached her story. Phillips goes on to write about how the incarceration of a family member affects the family as a whole. Unintended consequence s include threaten or actual eviction, the involvement of tyke social services, desalination of families, depression in children, and high mortality rates among already vulnerable people (Phillips 20).Ar stay oning a drug dealer for slinging coke may seem like a allure for the police but in all reality it causes a snowball effect on the rest of the family that will have to deal with. Phillips findings go on to say how the police work unintentionally bust apart the family functionalism. The only way to prevent crime is to have a strong united family. Operation Fly Trap was the combined effort of the LAP that removed twenty-eight key members of the local, gang-related drug trade. They did a great Job in reducing drug related crimes, however did very little in the gang related activity.Where the police succeed in incarceration rates, they fail in the goal to march on a strong community. Phillips lasting conclusion in this ethnography is that incarceration can lead to change magnit ude poverty rates, negative health outcomes, rises in violence, and instability among already vulnerable families. Lastly the importance of manufacturing gangs as iconic, newly federalism villains (Phillips 21). Phillips, Susan A. Operation Fly Trap L. A. Gangs, Drugs, and the Law. N. P. n. P. , n. D. Print. Susan A. Phillips. Susan A Phillips. N. P. , n. D. Web. 26 cot. 2013..
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