Gangs
Forthcoming
Grekul, Jana. Forthcoming. “Understanding Gang Involvement and Desistance: A Hope Framework” in The Oxford Compendium of Hope, Eds. Anthony Scioli and Steven van den Heuvel.
2024
Foster, S., & Grekul, J. (2024). "This might be cliché, but it was a sense of family": Gang involvement among Indigenous young adults and their search for attachment, community, and hope. Canadian Review of Sociology, 1–19.
Urbanik, M. Bucerius, S. M. (2024). Women in gang research. In David C. Pyrooz, James A. Densley, & John Leverso (Eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Gangs and Society (pp. 287–311). Oxford Academic.
2020
Berardi, L., & Bucerius, S.M. (2020). Organizational turning points: The transformation of the almighty Latin king and queen nation in New York City. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 45(2), 143-168.
Bucerius, S.M., Jones, D., & Haggerty, K.D. (2020). Indigenous gangs in Western Canada. In D. Brotherton (Eds.), Critical gang studies. London: Routledge.
Urbanik, M., Roks R, Storrod M, & Densley, J. (2020). Emerging issues in gang ethnography: The challenges and opportunities of eurogang research in a digital age. In C. Melde &F. Weerman (Eds.), Gangs in the era of internet and social media. Springer.
Urbanik, M. (2020). “Gangbangers are gangbangers, hustlers are hustlers”: The rap game, social media, and gang violence in Toronto. In D. Brotherton, D. & R. Gude (Eds.), International handbook of critical gang studies. Routledge. 34 pp.
Urbanik, M., Roks, R.A. (2020). Gangstalife: Fusing urban ethnography with netnography in gang studies. Qualitative Sociology 43, 213–233.
2018
Urbanik, M. (2018). Drawing boundaries or drawing weapons? Neighborhood master status as suppressor of gang violence. Qualitative Sociology, 41, 497–519.
Urbanik, M., Haggerty, K.D. (2018). ‘#It’s dangerous’: The online world of drug dealers, rappers and the street code. The British Journal of Criminology, 58(6), 1343–1360.