SANTA BARBARA — Victor Rios, associate professor of sociology at UC Santa Barbara and a specialist in the interplay between institutions of social control, juvenile crime, and gang-associated youths, will give the Harold J. Plous Award Lecture on Wednesday, April 18, the university reported this week in a media release.
His talk, “State Failure and Group Dynamics: Processes of Crime and Desistance Among Marginalized Youths,” will begin at 4 p.m. at the University Center’s Corwin Pavilion. It is free and open to the public.
In his research on social control and juvenile crime, Rios seeks to understand processes of marginalization and resilience among young people. Over the last 10 years, he has developed several distinct data sets that have helped him to understand and expose issues of delinquency, labeling, mass incarceration, interpersonal and institutional violence, chauvinism, racialization, and educational inequality.
In his lecture, Rios will discuss the findings from six years of major ethnographic studies conducted in northern and southern California on black and Latino young males who have a history of incarceration. The findings suggest that, beginning in elementary school, some of the boys are marked by teachers and law enforcement officials as dangerous or difficult, and are punished harshly for petty infractions. Once they accumulate what Rios describes as “negative credentials,” the young men are subject to surveillance, and, consequently, are more likely to end up in confinement.
Rios terms this criminalization “the youth control complex,” and explains how it systematically deprives boys of their dignity and their ability to succeed at school or in the job market. He examines how the culture of punishment pushes young men into the very criminality the punishment is meant to deter, leading to social incapacitation. One proposed solution for reducing gang violence and juvenile crime is his concept of “dignity enhancement as crime suppression.”
Rios, who came to UCSB in 2006, completed his Ph.D. at UC Berkeley in 2005. In 2010, he received the Chancellor’s Award for Mentoring Undergraduate Research. His book “Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys” (New York University Press, 2011) is in its fifth printing, and has received national attention in venues such as The Chronicle of Higher Education, National Public Radio, The News Hour, and Publisher’s Weekly.
Rios received the 2011-12 Harold J. Plous Award in June. The award is one of the university’s most prestigious faculty honors, given annually to an assistant professor from the humanities, social sciences, or natural sciences who has shown exceptional achievement in research, teaching, and service to the university. The award was established in 1957 to honor the memory of Harold J. Plous, an assistant professor of economics.