Skid Row Summary

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Forrest Stuart’s research Looks at how the Government led Police attempt effectively control Homeless groups of people and how those populations react and resist Police efforts. Stuart's book project is an ethnography of Los Angeles' Skid Row district, which is regarded as the "homeless capital of America." Stuarts book highlights hoe newly devised forms of social welfare, urban development, and criminal justice programs affect the dynamics of poverty, crime, located in urban spaces such as Skid Row, as well as the relationship existing between the police and the homeless and marginal groups residing in urban spaces being policed. Through an ethnographic lens on the policing of Los Angeles’ Skid Row district, Stuart explains and identify how, why the policing tactics on Skid Row …show more content…

In order to consider the role of these factors in marginal space, the second section reviews what is arguably the most influential study of both police discretion and policing in marginal space: The Third section conducts an ‘ethnographic revisit’ to Bittner’s (1967) Skid Row. An ethnographic revisit is an intensive comparison of one’s own field- work with a prior ethnography of the same site, pinpointing variation between the two periods and accounting for historical change in local processes. Bitters Skid Row saw the historical comparison demonstrates that, while Skid Row officers throughout the 20th century acted primarily as what he calls “rabble managers” and as asserted in “Bitters” theory aided in the exclusion of homeless people from urban spaces by quarantining and containing the homeless in Skid Row, while “modern” day Police officers due to SCI strategy primarily act as “recovery managers” on behalf of rehabilitative organizations, in an attempt to transform homeless people into "sober, self-governing and responsible

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