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National
The Father Factor — Crime on the Increase
in ‘Dad-Free’ Zones
There’s a new federal crime study — will it
take illegitimacy and fatherless boys into consideration?
BY TIM DRAKE
Register Senior Writer
December 17-23, 2006 Issue
Posted 12/13/06 at 8:00 AM
LOS ANGELES — Robert was looking for love. What he
found was a gang.
“I joined a gang for a family,” he told the PBS show
Religion and Ethics Newsweekly. “I never had one when I was growing
up. I joined the gang for a family. That’s it.”
Living with his new “family” led him to eight years in
prison — for robbery and car-jacking.
He ended up being part of Homeboy Industries, a
Los
Angeles program for ex-gang members run by
Jesuit Father Greg Boyle.
Robert’s story is not unusual — a young man without a
father in his life who falls into a life of crime.
But a federal study on crime seems to be ignoring what
one expert calls the “huge gorilla” in the midst of a violent crime
increase.
While the national crime rate has remained at record
low levels across the country over the past couple of years, FBI and
Department of Justice surveys have demonstrated a 2.2% increase in
violent crime (homicide, rape, robbery and aggravated assault) in
several cities — the first increase in such crimes since 2001.
In response, the Department of Justice announced in
October the creation of its Initiative for Safer Communities — a
three-part plan that will include a federal crime study targeted at
18 cities and suburbs searching for clues as to why such crimes are
on the rise nationally. While the survey plans to examine
demographic, economic and social matters that affect crime rates,
sociologists say the key factor the study should be examining is
that of modern family structure.
“When you control for marriage, the crime rates
between blacks and whites show no difference,” said Patrick Fagan,
the William H.G. FitzGerald Fellow at the Heritage Foundation. “The
huge gorilla sitting in the center of the floor is boys without
fathers.”
Sociologist Bradford Wilcox agreed.
“It would make sense for them to look at modern family
structure and fatherlessness in any kind of trends in criminal
activity,” said Wilcox,” assistant professor of sociology at the
University of Virginia and author of the
2004 book “Soft Patriarchs.” “Most studies confirm the notion that
boys raised outside of an intact household are more likely to run
afoul of the law.”
Wilcox referred to a study by Harvard sociologist
Robert Sampson that found that one of the strongest predictors, if
not the strongest predictor, of murder and robbery rates in urban
America is the percentage
of families headed up by a single parent.
Fagan noted in a recent National Review article
that out-of-wedlock births now account for 36.8% of all births, an
increase of 3% since the early 2000s. By 2006, he expects that one
in every two Hispanic children will be born out-of-wedlock.
The data is clear.
According to the U.S. Center for Disease Control, 85%
of all children exhibiting behavioral disorders come from fatherless
homes. Studies going back a quarter century show that 80% of rapists
and 70% of juveniles in state-operated institutions are from
fatherless homes.
Wilcox said there are good reasons for the
correlation.
“Boys that grow up in fatherless homes engage in
compensatory masculinity,” explained Wilcox. “They try to separate
themselves from their mothers, yet prove their masculinity by being
more aggressive, more violent and more sexually active. Without an
appropriate model in the home, they do not learn the appropriate
cues.”
Wilcox added that the role of a father is
irreplaceable. Non-residential dads, such as an uncle or Big
Brother, cannot easily fill in for a missing father.
“They tend to treat the kids to a movie or sporting
event,” said Wilcox. “That’s not really what kids need from men.
They need men who can challenge them, discipline them and show them
how to handle stress.”
Among the cities being studied by the Department of
Justice are: Atlanta, Boston, Houston,
Miami, Minneapolis, Omaha, San
Diego, San Bernardino,
Calif., and Tidewater, Va. The
Department of Justice’s deputy director of public affairs, Brian
Roehrkasse, did not return the Register’s repeated telephone calls
for further inquiry into the initiative.
The Dallas-based National Center for Policy Analysis is
also looking at the crime problem — and said that deterrents are
important.
“If you raise the likelihood that criminals will be
arrested, prosecuted and spend lengthy time in prison, you reduce
crime,” said Sterling Burnett, a senior fellow at the center.
But he admitted that the center hadn’t examined the
controversial issue of family structure.
Others suggested another often overlooked factor in
crime rates — that of faith.
“What [the Department of] Justice has never done is
look at the correlations between criminals, their family background
and religion,” said Fagan. “Researchers Sampson and John Laub said
there are two big things in the male adult who reforms from being a
criminal: The first is marriage; the second is religious
conversion.”
“Sports, the workplace, leisure and pop culture do not
motivate men to spend more time with their families. Churches can
play a unique role for men. They aren’t a panacea, but they do move
men toward a more family-friendly direction,” said Wilcox. “Faith
helps men to focus on their families and place them first.”
David Pence, editor of the Minneapolis-based magazine
City Fathers, sees the faith factor at play over a longer
period of time. City Fathers examined crime rates in
Minneapolis.
“While there might be one- to two-year increases or
decreases, usually related to aggressive policing, the rates have
never fallen to the percentages found in the 1950s,” Pence said.
“For Minneapolis and most of urban
America, 1980 was the
30-year culmination of the breakdown of civic order. In 1950,
Minneapolis had 140,000 more
people, 400 fewer rapes, 40 fewer murders and 3,000 fewer
burglaries. The population was poorer, denser and there were 500
fewer police officers.
But, he said, the world in 1950 had not yet witnessed
de-Christianization of certain segments of society, or the
“de-sacralization of marriage” or the loss of the kinds of jobs that
a man without a college degree could work at to support his family.
He said that crime is the result of a lack of
socialization of males not only within the family, but among other
groups in society, as well.
“The No. 1 cause of the breakdown among the black
population in big cities was the crisis of identity in the black
male who rejected the Christian model for a combination of
criminality and a newly-manufactured ‘black identity,’” said Pence,
a Catholic physician. “That’s why programs that deal with religious
conversion are the ones that will bring the criminal class back to
religion, marriage and work.”
Programs to Help
In Boston, Rev. Eugene
Rivers, pastor of the Azusa Christian Community in Four Corners, has developed alliances between
black, Catholic and Jewish clergy to develop strategies for reducing
crime and violence, particularly among black youth. Among their
initiatives: adopting abused and neglected inner-city black
children, encouraging local business development, standing up to
drug dealers and “adopting” gangs for evangelical outreach.
One of their programs is the Ella J. Baker House, a
community and faith-based center that mentors, monitors and
ministers to high-risk youth. Since 1988, the center has provided
direct service to thousands of youth and their families, helping
them to read, gain access to jobs and avoid violence.
Meanwhile, an Idaho program is focused directly
at fathers.
“One in six children in our parishes does not have
a father or grandfather at home,” said Patrick Mitchell, founder of
the Catholic Dads Matter! Project. “That has a huge impact. Not only
do they model the faith, but what it means to be a good
man.”
Mitchell provides a tangible image of involved
Catholic fathers and grandfathers through his project. Mitchell
conducts interviews with involved fathers and grandfathers and
produces a newsletter insert about the fathers that is available for
use by Catholic parishes. He currently provides local newsletters
for St.
Thomas Church and St. Pius Church in
the Diocese of Boise.
“Households without a father at home are at an
increased risk for the negative outcomes associated with father
absence, including growing up poor, getting into trouble with the
law, abusing drugs and alcohol, early sex, teen pregnancy, dropping
out of school and even suicide,” said Mitchell. “How much more
appropriate can it be to talk about fatherhood in the Church that
talks about God the Father?”
Tim Drake is based
in St. Joseph, Minnesota.
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