Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008
Source: New York Post (NY)
Copyright: 2008 N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.nypost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/296
Author: James Hart
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

CRACKONOMICS 101

The Sociology Of Drug Dealing

During the height of the crack epidemic, sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh 
went into one of the nation's most notorious housing projects, 
Chicago's Robert Taylor Homes, and learned how the drug economy 
worked by hanging out with a crack gang for a few years.  "Gang 
Leader for a Day" tells how Venkatesh, then a graduate student at the 
University of Chicago, won the trust of a gang leader named J.T., who 
became his guide to the projects. Many readers may remember that 
Venkatesh's research helped form the basis for the chapter of 
"Freakonomics" dealing with why some drug dealers live with their 
mothers. "Gang Leader," too, gets into the day-to-day business 
realities of selling crack.

J.T. - who went to college and worked a legit sale job before moving 
back to Robert Taylor - had to motivate and manage dozens of "sales 
teams," prevent ambitious junior associates from taking his spot and 
increase revenue, all the time wondering if he'd end up dead or in 
prison. "Sometimes he spoke of his job with dispassion, as if he were 
the CEO of some widget manufacturer - an attitude that I found not 
only jarring but, given the violence and destruction his enterprise 
caused, irresponsible," Venkatesh writes.

Not that drugs are the only way that J.T. and his gang, the Black 
Kings, made money. The gang took a cut from prostitutes, squatters 
and other hustlers who did business in the housing project. If 
somebody acted up, gang members delivered warnings and, if necessary, 
beatings to make things run smoothly.

Venkatesh uncovers that other tenants in the project - those who 
weren't dealing - often went to J.T. and his men for help before they 
tried contacting police, social workers or any other authority 
outside the project. Need money so the building's kids can have a 
party? Is your daughter's boyfriend smacking her around? The Kings 
got results, so they became a de facto government, providing 
everything from building security to weekend cookouts. "J.T. may have 
been a lawbreaker, but he was very much a lawmaker as well," 
Venkatesh says. "He acted as if his organization truly did rule the 
neighborhood, and sometimes the takeover was complete. The Black 
Kings policed the buildings more aggressively than the Chicago police did."

Even Ms. Bailey, the building president and one of the book's central 
characters, was more than willing to call J.T. and his men if there 
was trouble. As she explained to Venkatesh, "In the projects it's 
more important that you take care of the problem first. Then you 
worry about how you took care of the problem. If no one dies, then 
all the complaining don't mean nothing, because I'm doing my job."

There are no innocents in "Gang Leader," but there aren't many out 
and out villains, either. Venkatesh is careful to portray his subject 
sas rounded, morally complex people. They love their families, they 
take bribes, they watch out for their neighbors, they cut ethical 
corners. (At one point, a reverend and a Boys & Girls Club leader 
help broker a gang truce by telling one side they can sell drugs in a 
certain park for a week.)

"Gang Leader" is also about the author as much as it is J.T. and the 
other project residents. Venkatesh was a young researcher, who earned 
access to a culture where people don't like outsiders who ask 
questions. As he learns just how hopeless and corrupt life in Robert 
Taylor is, Venkatesh has to ask himself what he, as a researcher, 
owes the people he's been interviewing over the years. They have to 
stay, but eventually, he graduates.

And he acknowledges to himself that he, too, is hustling people - for 
their stories, their insights - so he can write his dissertation. 
"You need to think about why you're doing your work," one resident 
tells him. "You always tell me you want to help us. Well, we ain't 
never asked for your help, and we sure don't need it now."

He wrestles with the fact that a lot of his subjects are criminals. 
He squirms as J.T., his "protector," delivers harsh beatings to older 
men and younger dealers for petty offenses. Witnessing one of J.T.'s 
attacks is eye-opening for the author. "I felt like his scribe, 
tailing a powerful leader who liked to joke with the tenants and, 
when he needed to be assertive, did so quietly. I was naive, I 
suppose, but I had somehow persuaded myself that just because I 
hadn't seen any violence, it didn't exist. Now I had seen a different 
side of his power, a far less polished performance."

This book is worth all of the effort that Venkatesh invested, though. 
"Gang Leader For A Day" provides an in-depth look at an economy, a 
culture, a community that most of America doesn't see - and thus 
can't understand - because it takes time, years in this case, to win 
the kind of access necessary to tell the full story.

There are no answers here, no solutions for how to help people mired 
in urban poverty. But understanding the problem - and the people who 
struggle with it, who survive despite it - is an important first step.

Gang Leader for a Day

A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets

by Sudhir Venkatesh

Penguin Press
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom