Threat, Latinx Racialization, and Grassroots Leadership: Understanding Mobilization in Southern California’s Anti-Gang Injunction Movement

Author:

Scott Alexander1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA

Abstract

Under what conditions do Latinx communities mobilize in response to threats of repressive policing? This article addresses this question by comparing three cases of community organizing against civil gang injunctions. Drawing on six years of ethnographic fieldwork, 20 semi-structured interviews, and analysis of news reports, my findings reveal that mobilization was achieved in low-income Latinx neighborhoods located within affluent White cities, where organizers drew upon strong ties to community insiders to combine analyses of the threat of citywide gang injunctions with critiques of White racism and political power. Conversely, mobilization did not occur when this strategy was used to organize a low-income Latinx neighborhood within a primarily working-class, Latinx city, where organizers confronted a more narrowly targeted gang injunction and had weaker ties to community insiders. I argue this lack of mobilization in the latter campaign cannot only be attributed to the insufficient threat posed by the gang injunction. Rather, local racial and ethnic dynamics, where Chicanx organizers struggled to develop grassroots leadership among community insiders, build solidarity with first-generation Latinx immigrants and link threats of repressive policing to anti-Latinx racism impeded mobilization. These findings highlight how popular mobilization against perceived threats of repressive policing is not race-neutral but instead depends upon racial and ethnic contexts where organizers can effectively link the issue to White racism.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference112 articles.

1. Legal Consciousness of Undocumented Latinos: Fear and Stigma as Barriers to Claims-Making for First- and 1.5-Generation Immigrants

2. ACLU. 2013. “Breaking: Ninth Circuit Rules Orange County DA Enforcement of Gang Injunctions Violates Due Proces.” ACLU of Southern California, November 5. Retrieved June 5, 2019 (https://www.aclusocal.org/en/press-releases/breaking-ninth-circuit-appeals-rules-orange-county-da-enforcement-gang-injunctions).

3. Almada Jorge Morales. 2014. “Medidas para eliminar pandillas preocupa a vecinos de Santa Ana.” LaOpinion.com, August 4. Retrieved July 28, 2021 (http://www.laopinion.com/Cerco-apandilla-alarma-a-vecinos-de-Santa-Ana).

4. Opportunity Organizations and Threat‐Induced Contention: Protest Waves in Authoritarian Settings

5. Social Movements

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