Racial and Ethnic Relations.

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Maura Conway        

Racial and Ethnic Relations

Professor Hernandez-Arias

Paper #2        

Bibliography:

MacLeod, Jay.1995. Ain’t No Makin’ It: Aspirations and Attainment in a Low-Income Neighborhood. Boulder, CO. Westview Press. 0-8133-1515-8

        Jay MacLeod wandered his way into the Clarendon Heights public housing development for the first time in 1981. A sophomore in college at the time, MacLeod and two other students arranged a meeting with the Tenant Council to form a summer youth program. (preface) The council approved his idea for a youth program after much discussion as to motives behind the program and possible funding. MacLeod claims he gained more insight to life and learned more lounging around the hallways of Clarendon Heights than he did studying in the dorms at his local University.  He was inspired by the youths he worked with to write his undergraduate thesis on the contrast between two strikingly different groups of teenagers who lived in this poor neighborhood.  

        MacLeod focused his research on the Hallway Hangers and the Brothers.  He submerged himself in their lifestyle and culture for a year in order to get a firm grip on their reality.  Jay MacLeod’s ability to delve right into their peer culture gave him the opportunity to scrutinize and observe their true aspirations, values, and social issues.  Over a period of twelve years, MacLeod, slowly found harsh economic inequality and a lack of social mobility for people born in low-income neighborhoods. It seemed as if America, the land of opportunity, should change their motto to a more appropriate and honest catchphrase!

        In order to analyze the teenage male population of this low-income neighborhood, MacLeod chooses to focus on two peer groups, the hallway hangers and the brothers. Therefore, he selected a sample within the Clarendon Heights. The Hallway Hangers consisted of primarily white males that tended to hang out in a specific hallway in the project(pg.6).   These eight young men had low aspirations and almost zero confidence in social mobility.  The second group was made up of almost all black males who called themselves the Brothers (pg.6).   These men spoke with high expectations for their future and much hope for opportunity.  Aspirations arbitrate the hopes and dreams of an individual and what society can both provide and offer to the individual.  Therefore, MacLeod was highly interested in discovering the link between the youth’s goals and what could accomplish with the lack of opportunities accessible to them.  

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        The Hallway Hangers show extreme lack of faith in the American education system. They have no desire to attain success through educational opportunity.  In addition, they posses a high degree of racism in their viewpoints and attitudes. Furthermore, their racist beliefs hinder their ability to be optimistic and lead to increased aggression and violent behavior.  The young men have negative attitudes towards their futures, “ Out here, there’s not the opportunity to make money. That’s how you get into stealin’ and all that shit… All right, to get a job, first of all, this is a handicap, out here. If ...

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