Abstract
Recent criminal justice reforms highlight the contested nature of crime problems and solutions. We draw on 45 months of participant observation in Philadelphia to examine how interpretive frames of crime and justice are co-constructed between citizens and public officials at community meetings, and how these drive meaningful enactment of local policy. We find that residents frame crime problems and solutions differently for drug sellers versus public order offenders, and attempt to protect the latter from the criminal justice system. Local officials make claims to insider status to convince community members to form partnerships. They often engage in responsibilization discourses, exhorting citizens to help themselves. Residents use community meetings to extract accountability from public agents and share resources for engaging non-justice agencies to address crime problems. The role of neighborhood associations deserves further study, particularly how to achieve sustained engagement of residents committed to addressing crime in their communities.
Notes on contributors
Jamie J. Fader is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at Temple University. She is the author of Falling Back: Incarceration and Transitions to Adulthood among Urban Youth (Rutgers University Press, 2013).
Scott W. VanZant received his M.A. in Criminal Justice at Temple University and currently works as an investigator for the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office.
Abigail R. Henson is a Doctoral Candidate in Criminal Justice at Temple University. Her dissertation examines how Black fathers in Southwest Philadelphia construct and enact their paternal identities in the face of stigma and discrimination and how policing practices in the area impact fatherhood.