Use of leisure-time, youth and crime in Mexico
PDF (Español (España))

Keywords

victimization
leisure time
security
youth.

How to Cite

Arteaga, N., Gayet, C., & Alegría, A. (2016). Use of leisure-time, youth and crime in Mexico. Economía Sociedad Y Territorio, (52), 623–650. https://doi.org/10.22136/est0522016575

Abstract

The article discusses that the risk of youth in Mexico to be victims of a  crime during their leisure time depends on their activities inside or outside home as well as their lifestyles. Also the relation between these elements is mediated by demographic and socioeconomic variables. This means that leisure activities are related to the position of the victim in the social structure. So, not only the activities of the leisure time determine the processes of victimization but also those who perform them.
https://doi.org/10.22136/est0522016575
PDF (Español (España))

References

Anderson, Elijah (2000), Street code: decency, violence, and the moral life of the inner city, W.W. Norton y Company, New York.

Blancas-Madrigal, Daniel (2004), “Toque de queda, así inician las dictaduras”, Crónica, México, http://www.cronica.com.mx, 6 de julio 2015.

Blokland, Talja (2008), “Facing violence: everyday risks in an American Housing Project”, Sociology, 42 (4), British Sociological Association, Durham, pp. 601-617.

Caldeira, Teresa (2000), City of Walls. Crime, segregation, and citizenship in São Paulo, University of California Press, Los Angeles.

Camarena, Rosa María (2015), “Efectos de la delincuencia: inseguridad y miedo entre los jóvenes”, Coyuntura Demográfica, núm. 8, Sociedad Mexicana de Demografía, México, pp. 41-51.

Carmona, Matthew (2010), “Contemporary public space, part two: classification”, Journal of Urban Design, 15 (2), Institute of Urban Planning, University of Nottingham, London, pp. 157-175.

Chávez, Silvia, Israel Dávila y Javier Salinas (2004), “En marcha, toque de queda en Tlalnepantla; repudio de vecinos”, La Jornada, 5 de junio, UNAM, México, http//www.jornada.unam.mx, 3 de julio 2015.

Coaffe Jon, David Wood y Peter Rogers (2009), The everyday resilience of the city, Palgrave, London.

Cohen, Lawrence y Marcus Felson (1979), “Social change and crimerate trends: a routine activity approach”, American Sociological Review, 44 (4), American Sociological association, Washington, pp. 588-608.

Collins, Randall (2008), Violence. A micro-sociological theory, Princeton University Press, Princeton.

Davis, Robert y Lucy Friedman (1985), “The emotional aftermath of crime and violence”, en Charles Figley (ed.), Trauma and its Wake, Brunner-Mazel, New York, pp. 90-112.

Denkers, Adriaan y Franz Winkel (1998), “Crime victims’ well-being and fear in a prospective and longitudinal study”, International Review of Victimology, 5 (3-4), University of Sheffield, Thousand Oaks, pp. 93-140.

Garfinkel, Harold (1984), Studies in ethnomethodology, Polity, Cambridge.

Giddens, Anthony (1997), Modernidad e identidad del yo, Península, Barcelona.

Goffman, Erving (1986), Frame analysis. An essay of the organization of experience, Northeastern University Press, Boston.

Goffman, Erving (1977), Interaction ritual. Essay on Face-to-face behavior, Pantheon Books, New York.

González, Román (2002), “El toque de queda en Tecate atropella los artículos 1 y 11 de la Carta Magna”, Cimacnoticias, 24 de mayo, México, http://www. cimacnoticias.com.mx, 3 de julio 2015.

Green Eileen y Carrie Singleton (2006), “Risky bodies at leisure: young women negotiating space and place”, Sociology, 40 (5), British Sociological Association, Durham, pp. 853-871.

Heitgerd Janet y Robert Bursik (1987), “Extracommunity dynamics and the ecology of delinquency”, British Journal of Sociology, 94 (4), London School of Economics, London, pp. 775-787.

Hindelang, Michel, Michael Gottfredson y James Garofalo (1978), Victims of personal crime: an empirical foundation for a theory of personal victimization, Ballinger, Cambridge.

Instituto Mexicano de la Juventud (2010), Encuesta Nacional de Juventud 2010, http://bdsocial.inmujeres.gob.mx, 3 de julio de 2015.

Imbusch, Peter, Michel Misse y Fernando Carrión (2011), “Violence research in Latin America and the Caribbean: a literature review”, International Journal of Conflict and Violence, 5 (1), University of Bielefeld, Maryland, pp. 87-154.

Jacobs, Bruce y Richard Wright (2010), “Bounded rationality, retaliation, and the spread of urban violence”, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 25 (10), University of Washington, Washington, pp. 1739-1766.

Job, Vanessa (2013) “En Zongolica, Veracruz, autoridades determinaron declarar un toque de queda para los jóvenes para disminuir los problemas de seguridad”, Noticieros Televisa, 7 de febrero, México, http://noticierostelevisa. esmas.com, 3 de julio de 2015.

Jorgensen, Lisa, Gary Ellis y Eward Ruddell (2013), “Fear perceptions in public parks: interactions of environmental concealment, the presence of people recreating, and gender”, Environment and Behavior, 45 (7), Connecticut College, Utah, pp. 803-820.

Jorquera, Ramón (2011), Ciudad de miedo. La seguridad y el capital social en las clases medias, Colegio de Sonora, Hermosillo.

La Policiaca (2011), “Aplican toque de queda a menores en Acuña, Coahuila”, La Policiaca, Acuña, Coahuila, 21 de abril, http://www.lapoliciaca.com/nota-roja, 3 de julio de 2015.

Lupton, Deborah (1999), “Dangerous places and the unpredictable stranger: constructions of fear of crime”, The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 32 (1), Griffith University, Auckland, pp. 1-15.

Mawby, Rob y Sandra Walklate (1997), “The impact of burglary: a tale of two cities”, International Review of Victimology, 4 (2), University of Sheffield, Thousand Oaks, pp. 267-296.

México Unido contra la Delincuencia (2013), Encuesta nacional sobre percepción de inseguridad ciudadana en México, Consulta Mitofsky, mayo 2013, http://mucd.org.mx/recursos, 3 de julio 2015.

Miethe, Teranse y Kriss Drass (1999), “Exploring the social contest of instrumental and expressive homicides: an application of qualitative comparative analysis”, Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 15 (1), George Manson University, New York, pp. 1-21.

Nieto, Marcus, Kimberly Johnston-Dodds y Charlene Wear (2002), Public and private applications of video surveillance and biometric technologies, California Research Bureau, Sacramento.

Ostrom, Elinor (2000), El gobierno de los bienes comunes. La evolución de las instituciones de acción colectiva, UNAM-CRIM-Fondo de Cultura Económica, México.

Pérez, Verónica, David Díaz y Carmen Fernández (2014), “Percepción de la violencia social en estudiantes mexicanos de educación media, usuarios y no usuarios de sustancias”, Psicología y Salud, 24 (2), Universidad Veracruzana, Xalapa, pp. 255-268.

Resick, Patricia (1987), “Psychological effects of victimization: implications for the criminal justice system”, Crime & Delinquency, 33 (1), Southern Illinois University, Cambridge, pp. 468-478.

Richards, Neil (2013), “Dangers of surveillance”, Harvard Law Review, 126 (7), University of Harvard, Cambridge, pp. 1934-1964.

Salmi, Venla, Mirka Smolej y Janne Kivivuori (2007), “Crime victimization, exposure to crime news and social trust among adolescents”, Young, 15 (3), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, pp. 255-272.

Sennett, Richard (2012), Together. The rituals, pleasures and politics of cooperation, Penguin, London.

Shapland, Joanna y Matthew Hall (2007), “What do we know about the effects of crime on victims?”, International Review of Victimology, 14 (2), University of Sheffield, Thousand Oaks, pp. 175-217.

Simmel, Georg (2001), El individuo y la libertad. Ensayos de crítica a la cultura, Península, Barcelona.

Stein, Rachel (2010), “The utility of country structure: a cross-national multilevel analysis of property and violent victimology”, Interna tional Criminal Justice Review, 20 (1), Georgia State University, Georgia, pp. 35-55.

Sutherland, Edwin (1988), Ladrones profesionales, La Piqueta, Madrid.

Threadgold, Steven y Pam Nilan (2009), “Reflexivity of Contemporary youth, risk and cultural capital”, Current Sociology, 57 (1), International Sociological Association, London, pp. 47-68.

Tseloni, Aandromiche y Graham Farrell (2002), “Burglary victimization across Europe: the roles of prior victimization, micro and macrolevel routine activities”, en Paul Nieuwbeerta (ed.), Crime victimization in comparative perspective,The Federation Press, Annandale,

pp. 141-161.

Valenzuela, Alfonso (2013), “Power, territory, and the social control of space in Latin America”, Latin American Perspectives, 40 (2), University of California, Riverside, pp. 21-34.

Valenzuela, José Manuel (2002), “El tropel de las pasiones. Jóvenes y juventudes en México”, en José Manuel Valenzuela (coord.) Jóvenes Mexicanos del Siglo XXI. Encuesta Nacional de Juventud 2000, Instituto Mexicano de la Juventud, México, pp. 27-51.

Wakefield, Alison (2005), The public surveillance functions of private security. Surveillance & Society, 2 (4), Queen’s University, Kingston, pp. 529-545.

Walklate, Sandra (2011), “Reframing criminal victimization: finding a place for vulnerability and resilience”, Theoretical Criminology, 15 (2), University of Oxford, Oxford, pp. 179-194.

Walklate, Sandra (2001), “Fearful communities?”, Urban Studies, 38 (5-6), Manchester Metropolitan University, New Haven, pp. 929-939.

Walklate, Sandra (1998), “Crime and community fear or trust?”, British Journal of Sociology, 94 (4), London School of Economics, London, pp. 550-569.

Wilcox, Pamela, Kenneth Land y Scott Hunt (2003), Criminal circumstance: A dynamic multicontextual criminal opportunity theory, Aldine, New York.

Wilsem, Johan, Nan Dirk de Graff y Karin Wittebrood (2003), “Crossnational differences in victimization: disentangling the impact of composition and context”, European Sociological Review, 19 (2), Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 125-142.

Zócalo Saltillo (2012), “Avalan padres toque de queda”, Zócalo Saltillo, Coahuila, 28 de septiembre, http://www. zocalo.com.mx, 3 de julio de 2015.

Licencia Creative Commons
This works is under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license