rivkat: Wonder Woman reading comic (wonder woman reading comic)
([personal profile] rivkat Jun. 6th, 2005 12:46 am)
Edward Humes, No Matter How Loud I Shout: A Year in the Life of a Juvenile Court: The problem with giving up on other people, as Octavia Butler points out, is that they don't just go away. Humes tracks a number of kids as they spend a year in LA's juvenile justice system and, randomly, receive justice, contempt or mercy; how they turn out is only loosely correlated with how the system treats them. Humes is good at telling individual stories as he shows how the overwhelming crush of people prevents the system from making any sense of those stories. He's not a big fan of giving kids the same procedural rights and protections as adults, but he gives some attention to the costs of informality as well, the way mistakes and misconceptions can lead the system to mistreat a kid. The problem, of course, is that with resources stretched beyond the breaking point, the formal protections (right to attorneys, right to a hearing, etc.) don't work for kids, so we end up with an inefficient and informal system. There's not much hope here, except in the idea that 2/3rds of kids who enter the system straighten out on their own regardless of what the justice system does. He argues for a resource-intensive program focusing on the sixteen percent of kids who become repeat offenders, starting when they commit petty offenses the system currently ignores as not important compared to the murders and armed robberies happening right now. Like western civilization, it sounds like a good idea.

Natalie Angier, The Beauty of the Beastly: A collection of columns on various pop science topics from the New York Times writer, this slender volume would have benefited immensely from a serious bibliography in the back. Otherwise, it's a glancing introduction to some recent topics in biology, often with a focus on sexual selection.

David S. Ariel, What Do Jews Believe?: This is an interesting overview of Jewish thought through the ages about the Big Topics, like the nature of deity and the Jewish people's relationship thereto. It gets a little dry at times, but might be of interest to someone looking for a historical overview of the variety of Jewish perspectives, focusing mainly but not exclusively on religious Jewish thinkers.

Temple Grandin, Animals in Translation: Another book from Grandin, possibly autism's most celebrated author. Grandin believes her autism gives us insight into how animals think (though she does emphasize that autistic human brains are malfunctioning when they do things that animal brains do normally). She has interesting perspectives on dogs in particular – she hates breeding for specific physical traits, insisting that it will reliably produce neurological problems. And she analyzes dog training in ways that will never be useful to me but might well be of interest to dog owners.

Michael Perry, Population 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at a Time: Perry, a writer, returned to his tiny Wisconsin hometown and began work as a firefighter and EMT. He tells a great story, balancing folksiness with awareness that his status as a "writer" makes him think differently than his neighbors, and gives a strong sense of the triumphs and the tragedies he's witnessed in his outings with the other volunteer firefighters.

Jon Krakauer, Under the Banner of Heaven: Krakauer is interested in people who go to extremes, which is what gave us Into Thin Air (which left me with not much but contempt for Everest-climbers). Here he tackles religious extremists, specifically Mormon extremists who think the church lost its way when it rejected polygamy. Krakauer wraps the story of a particular double murder in 1984 in a history of Joseph Smith and later Mormon prophets, usually ones who left the mainstream church when they received personal revelations leading them to fundamentalism. Krakauer seems to think that Mormonism is highly vulnerable to fundamentalism because adherents can easily come to believe that they, like Joseph Smith, are receiving direct revelations that override any secular obligation; I'm not so sure how different that makes Mormonism – and Krakauer doesn't explicitly say Mormons are different, so I may be overreading. It's an interesting history, though not particularly well-organized; if I ever teach the Religion Clauses again, I will definitely assign the book because of the questions it raises about government-religious entanglement, from polygamists' children collecting welfare and local governments run for the benefit of local sects to governments setting out to destroy a sect that makes others nervous.

From: [identity profile] ter369.livejournal.com


The firefighter narrative goes on my list.

Seeing your Wonder Woman icon reminds me of the Katie Holmes up for casting rumors. Meh.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Oh God no. She's already threatening to ruin Batman Begins for me (though to be fair, the voice Christian Bale uses as Batman might do that anyway). I like the idea of Charisma Carpenter, actually.

From: [identity profile] ter369.livejournal.com


I hear you on the she-might-muck-up-Batman Begins.

Ditto, on the Charisma Carpenter (excellent) idea.

I don't want to see someone who comes off as a bland fourteen year old as Wonder Woman. And I don't really know the character's mythos. It just seems off.

From: [identity profile] destina.livejournal.com


He argues for a resource-intensive program focusing on the sixteen percent of kids who become repeat offenders, starting when they commit petty offenses the system currently ignores as not important compared to the murders and armed robberies happening right now.

I'm intimately involved with the California juvenile justice system, and he's right; early intervention programs and prevention-based strategies are the only way to go. (You really wouldn't believe the number of felony juvenile cases that are plea-bargained down to a misdemeanor prior to adjudication because the courts and public defenders are too overwhelmed to really care. Or maybe you would. *g*) Unfortunately, our beloved governor sees prevention programs funded by state dollars as expendable bargaining chips in his war with various government agencies like the California Youth Authority. It's a shame, because these have been proven to be our best and most effective methods of preventing juvenile crime.

From: [identity profile] morgandawn.livejournal.com


I have been so clueless - I had no idea you were a fellow Californian. North or South?

From: [identity profile] morgandawn.livejournal.com


Hey, have you ever made it to any of the local slashbashes down there? I wish we had something like that up here.


From: [identity profile] destina.livejournal.com


I used to go to them once in a while, several years ago -- in 2000/2001. But I stopped, after a while. Some of it was my work schedule, but some of it was the fact that I just don't enjoy those gatherings as much as others do. Too introverted. Smaller groups work better for me. Also, there was a lot of driving involved, to get to some of the bashes; it's tiring to drive an hour and a half, hang out for two hours and drive an hour and a half home.

From: [identity profile] morgandawn.livejournal.com


that makes sense. Wish we had more of a choice - talk about introverted groups! I had to cancel the one we hold every year - am doubtful anyone will step up and actually host one themselves.

grumpily yours.....


From: [identity profile] vivwiley.livejournal.com


He argues for a resource-intensive program focusing on the sixteen percent of kids who become repeat offenders, starting when they commit petty offenses the system currently ignores as not important compared to the murders and armed robberies happening right now. Like western civilization, it sounds like a good idea.

Interesting - I wonder if this (i.e., intensive services focusing on a particularly problematic population) is going to be the newest vogue in policy debates particularly as "discretionary" spending dollars (i.e., everything at the Federal level that isn't defense, medicare, medicaid, social security or debt service) are increasingly crunched. I just attended a presentation by one of the leading researchers on homelessness prevention and policy and his point was very similar - there are some very simple and relatively inexpensive interventions (primarily small housing subsidies over defined, and often short durations of time) that will "cure" 85-90% of homelessness situations (among homeless families, anyway, there is a somewhat different profile among homeless single adults). But, right now, all homeless families in most jurisdictions are receiving costly warp-around services that really aren't making a difference for the majority. The speaker was making a point similar to Humes - we need to ration these expensive, intensive interventions for the 10-15% chronically/episodically homeless families to really make a difference there.

As always - thanks for sharing your reviews - I always enjoy them.

From: [identity profile] luvmax1.livejournal.com


Have you read David Simon's books- Homicide:A Year on the Killing Streets (on which the incredible TV show was based), and The Corner, about the families and addicts in one Baltimore neighborhood. They're both in the vein of the first book you reviewed (which I'd like to read), and they're both great. I just finished rereading "The COrner" for about the tenth time- I'm tempted to order the DVD of the miniseries off Amazon.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


I read "Homicide" but not "The Corner" -- you're right, I should probably read that too. If you're interested in the juvenile aspects, there's a book called "Turning Stones" by a guy doing child protective services in NYC that is also incredibly powerful. And "Random Family," which seems to cover related ground, is on my to-read shelf.

From: (Anonymous)

Another rec


Not that you need more to read, but you might also want to check out A kind and just parent: the children of juvenile court by William Ayers.

-Syb
.

Links

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags