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Why violence clusters in cities -- and how to reduce it

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    You are a trauma surgeon,
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    working in a midnight shift
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    in an inner city emergency room.
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    A young man is wheeled in before you,
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    lying unconscious on a gurney.
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    He's been shot in the leg
    and is bleeding profusely.
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    Judging from the entry and exit wounds,
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    as well as the amount of hemorrhaging,
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    the bullet most likely
    clipped the femoral artery,
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    one of the largest
    blood vessels in the body.
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    As the young man's doctor,
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    what should you do?
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    Or more precisely,
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    what should you do first?
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    You look at the young man's clothes,
    which seem old and worn.
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    He may be jobless, homeless,
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    lacking a decent education.
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    Do you start treatment
    by finding him a job,
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    getting him an apartment,
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    or helping him earn his GED?
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    On the other hand,
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    this young man has been involved
    in some sort of conflict
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    and may be dangerous.
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    Before he wakes up,
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    do you place him in restraints,
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    alert hospital security or call 911?
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    Most of us wouldn't do
    any of these things.
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    And instead, we would take
    the only sensible
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    and humane course of action
    available at the time.
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    First, we would stop the bleeding.
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    Because unless we stop the bleeding,
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    nothing else matters.
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    What's true in the emergency room
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    is true for cities all around the country.
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    When it comes to urban violence,
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    the first priority is to save lives.
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    Treating that violence
    with the same urgency
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    that we would treat
    a gunshot wound in the ER.
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    What are we talking about
    when we say urban violence?
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    Urban violence is the lethal
    or potentially lethal violence
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    that happens on the streets of our cities.
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    It goes by many names:
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    Street violence, youth violence,
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    gang violence, gun violence.
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    Urban violence happens
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    among the most disadvantaged
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    and disenfranchised among us.
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    Mostly young men,
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    without a lot of options or much hope.
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    I have spent hundreds of hours
    with these young men.
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    I've taught them at a high school
    in Washington DC,
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    where one of my students was murdered.
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    I've stood across form them
    in courtrooms in New York City,
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    where I worked as a prosecutor.
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    And finally,
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    I've gone from city to city
    as a policy maker,
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    and as a researcher,
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    meeting with these young men,
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    and exchanging ideas
    on how to make our communities safer.
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    Why should we care about these young men?
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    Why does urban violence matter?
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    Urban violence matters
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    because it causes more deaths
    here in the United States
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    than any other form of violence.
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    Urban violence also matters
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    because we can actually do
    something about it.
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    Controlling it is not the impossible,
    intractable challenge
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    that many believe it to be.
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    In fact, there are a number
    of solutions available today
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    that are proven to work.
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    And what these solutions have in common
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    is one key ingredient.
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    They all recognize
    that urban violence is sticky.
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    Meaning that it clusters together
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    among a surprisingly small number
    of people and places.
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    In New Orleans, for instance,
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    a network of fewer than 700 individuals
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    accounts for the majority
    of the city's lethal violence.
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    Some call these individuals hot people.
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    Here in Boston,
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    70 percent of shootings are concentrated
    on blocks and corners
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    covering just five percent of the city.
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    These locations
    are often known as hot spots.
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    In city after city,
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    a small number of hot people and hot spots
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    account for the clear majority
    of lethal violence.
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    In fact, this finding
    has been replicated so many times,
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    that researchers now call this phenomenon
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    the law of crime concentration.
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    When we look at the science,
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    we see that sticky solutions work best.
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    To put it bluntly,
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    you can't stop shootings
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    if you won't deal with shooters.
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    And you can't stop killings
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    if you won't go where people get killed.
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    Four years ago,
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    my colleagues and I performed
    a systematic meta review
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    of antiviolence strategies,
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    summarizing the results of over 1,400
    individual impact evaluations.
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    What we found, again and again,
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    was that the strategies
    that were the most focused,
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    the most targeted,
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    the stickiest strategies,
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    were the most successful.
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    We saw this in criminology
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    in studies of policing,
    gang prevention, and reentry.
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    But we also saw this in public health,
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    where targeted tertiary and secondary
    prevention performed better
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    than more generalized primary prevention.
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    When policymakers focus
    on the most dangerous people and places,
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    they get better results.
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    What about replacement
    and displacement, you might ask.
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    Research shows that when
    drug dealers are locked up,
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    new dealers step right in,
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    replacing those that came before.
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    Some worry that when police focus
    on certain locations,
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    crime will be displaced,
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    moving down the street
    or around the corner.
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    Fortunately, we know now
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    that because of the stickiness phenomenon,
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    the replacement and displacement effects
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    associated with these sticky strategies
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    are minimal.
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    It takes a lifetime of trauma
    to create a shooter.
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    And decades of a disinvestment
    to create a hot spot.
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    So these people and places
    don't move around easily.
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    What about root causes?
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    Isn't addressing poverty or inequality
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    or lack of opportunity
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    the best way to prevent violence?
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    Well, according to the science,
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    yes and no.
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    Yes, in that high rates of violence
    are clearly associated
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    with various forms of social
    and economic disadvantage.
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    But no, in that changes in these factors
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    do not necessarily result
    in changes in violence,
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    especially not in the short run.
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    Take poverty, for instance.
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    Meaningful progress on poverty
    will take decades to achieve,
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    while poor people need and deserve
    relief from violence right now.
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    Root causes also can't explain
    the stickiness phenomenon.
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    If poverty always drove violence,
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    then we would expect to see violence
    among all poor people.
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    But we don't see that.
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    Instead, we can empirically observe
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    that poverty concentrates,
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    crime concentrates further still,
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    and violence concentrates most of all.
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    That is why sticky solutions work.
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    They work because they deal
    with first things first.
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    And this is important,
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    because while poverty
    may lead to violence,
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    strong evidence shows that violence
    actually perpetuates poverty.
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    Here's just one example of how.
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    As documented by Patrick Sharkey,
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    a sociologist,
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    he showed that when poor children
    are exposed to violence
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    it traumatizes them.
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    It impacts their ability to sleep,
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    to pay attention, to behave and to learn.
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    And if poor children can't learn,
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    then they can't do well in school.
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    And that ultimately impacts
    their ability to earn a paycheck
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    later in life
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    that is large enough to escape poverty.
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    And unfortunately, in a series
    of landmark studies,
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    by economist Raj Chetty,
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    that is exactly what we've seen.
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    Poor children exposed to violence
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    have lower income mobility
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    than poor children who grow up peacefully.
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    Violence literally traps
    poor kids in poverty.
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    That is why it is so important
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    to focus relentlessly on urban violence.
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    Here are two examples of how.
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    Here in Boston, in the 1990s,
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    a partnership between cops
    and community members
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    achieved a stunning 63 percent reduction
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    in youth homicide.
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    In Oakland, that same strategy
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    recently reduced nonfatal
    gun assaults by 55 percent.
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    In Cincinnati, Indianapolis and New Heaven
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    it cut gun violence by more than a third.
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    At its simplest,
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    this strategy simply identifies those
    who are most likely to shoot,
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    or be shot,
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    and then confronts them
    with a double message
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    of empathy and accountability.
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    "We know it's you
    that's doing the shooting.
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    It must stop.
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    If you let us, we will help you.
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    If you make us, we will stop you."
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    Those willing to change
    are offered services and support.
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    Those who persist
    in their violent behavior
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    are brought to justice
    via targeted law enforcement action.
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    In Chicago, another program
    uses cognitive behavioral therapy
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    to help teenage boys
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    manage difficult thoughts and emotions,
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    by teaching them how to avoid
    or mitigate conflicts.
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    This program reduced violent
    crime arrests among participants
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    by half.
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    Similar strategies have reduced
    criminal reoffending
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    by 25 to 50 percent.
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    Now Chicago has launched a new effort,
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    using these same techniques,
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    but with those at the highest risk
    for gun violence.
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    And the program is showing
    promising results.
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    What's more,
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    because these strategies
    are so focused, so targeted,
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    they tend not to cost much
    in absolute terms.
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    And they work with the laws
    already on the books today.
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    So that's the good news.
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    We can have peace in our cities,
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    right now,
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    without big budgets,
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    and without new laws.
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    So why hasn't this happened yet?
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    Why are these solutions still limited
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    to a small number of cities,
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    and why do they struggle,
    even when successful,
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    to maintain support?
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    Well, that's the bad news.
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    The truth is, we have not been very good
    at organizing our efforts
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    around this phenomenon of stickiness.
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    There are at least three reasons
    why we don't follow the evidence
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    when it comes to urban violence reduction.
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    And the first, as you might expect,
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    is politics.
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    Most sticky solutions don't conform
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    to one political platform or another.
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    Instead, they offer
    both carrots and sticks,
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    balancing the promise of treatment
    with the threat of arrest,
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    combining place-based investment
    with hot-spots policing.
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    In other words,
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    these solutions are both soft and tough
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    at the same time.
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    Because they don't line up neatly
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    with the typical talking points
    of either the left or the right,
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    politicians won't gravitate to these ideas
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    without some education,
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    and maybe even a little pressure.
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    It won't be easy,
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    but we can change the politics
    around these issues
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    by reframing violence
    as a problem to be solved,
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    not an argument to be won.
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    We should emphasize evidence
    over ideology,
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    and what works versus what sounds good.
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    The second reason why
    we don't always follow the evidence
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    is the somewhat complicated nature
    of these solutions.
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    There is an irony here.
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    What are the simplest ways
    to reduce violence?
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    More cops.
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    More jobs.
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    Fewer guns.
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    These are easy to spell out,
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    but they tend not to work
    as well in practice.
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    While on the other hand,
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    research-based solutions
    are harder to explain,
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    but get better results.
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    Right now, we have a lot of professors
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    writing about violence
    in academic journals.
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    And we have a lot of people
    keeping us safe out on the street.
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    But what we don't have
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    is a lot of communication
    between these two groups.
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    We don't have a strong bridge
    between research and practice.
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    And when research actually
    does inform practice,
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    that bridge is not built by accident.
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    It happens when someone takes the time
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    to carefully explain
    what the research means,
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    why it's important,
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    and how it can actually
    make a difference in the field.
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    We spend plenty of time creating research,
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    but not enough breaking it down
    into bite-sized bits
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    that a busy cop or social worker
    can easily digest.
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    It may be difficult
    to acknowledge or accept,
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    but race is the third and final reason
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    why more has not been done
    to reduce violence.
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    Urban violence concentrates
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    among poor communities of color.
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    That makes it easy for those of us
    who don't live in those communities
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    to ignore the problem
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    or pretend it's not ours to solve.
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    That is wrong, of course.
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    Urban violence is everyone's problem.
  • 12:30 - 12:31
    Directly or indirectly,
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    we all pay a price
    for the shootings and killings
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    that happen on the streets of our cities.
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    That is why we need to find new ways
    to motivate more people
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    to cross class and color lines
    to join this struggle.
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    Because these strategies
    are not resource-intensive,
  • 12:47 - 12:49
    we don't need to motivate many new allies.
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    We just need a few.
  • 12:51 - 12:53
    And we just need them to be loud.
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    If we can overcome these challenges
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    and spread these sticky solutions
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    to the neighborhoods that need them,
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    we could save thousands of lives.
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    If the strategies
    I've discussed here today
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    were implemented right now
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    in the nation's 40 most violent cities,
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    we could save over 12,000 souls
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    over the next eight years.
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    How much would it cost?
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    About 100 million per year.
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    That might sound like a lot,
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    but in fact, that figure represents
    less than one percent
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    of one percent
  • 13:28 - 13:29
    of the annual federal budget.
  • 13:29 - 13:32
    The Defense Department
    spends about that much
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    for a single F-35 fighter jet.
  • 13:35 - 13:37
    Metaphorically,
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    the treatment is the same,
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    whether it's a young man
    suffering from a gunshot wound,
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    a community riddled with such wounds,
  • 13:44 - 13:46
    or a nation filled with such communities.
  • 13:46 - 13:50
    In each case, the treatment,
    first and foremost,
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    is to stop the bleeding.
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    I know this can work.
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    I know it because I've seen it.
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    I've seen shooters put down their guns
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    and devote their lives
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    to getting others to do the same.
  • 14:07 - 14:09
    I've walked through housing projects
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    that were notorious for gun fire
  • 14:11 - 14:13
    and witnessed children playing outside.
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    I've sat with cops and community members
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    who used to hate one another,
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    but now work together.
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    And I've seen people
    from all walks of life,
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    people like you,
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    finally decide to get involved
    in this struggle.
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    And that's why I know that together
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    we can and we will end
    this senseless slaughter.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why violence clusters in cities -- and how to reduce it
Speaker:
Thomas Abt
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:51

English subtitles

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