154 research outputs found

    Where\u27s the Beef? How Chicago Gang Members Utilize Social Media to Promote Beefs and Incite Gang Violence and Gang Murders

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    This is a literature review about how gang members utilize social media to incite gang violence offline to assist in the creation of a new special unit of the Chicago Police Department that will work together with gang violence prevention/gang violence reduction organizations to assist in reducing gang conflict/gang violence created on social media. There are studies that focus on how gang members use social media. The literature focuses on different aspects of how gang members and gangs use social media. “Internet banging” or “cyber banging” is a form of gang banging but on social media platforms. “Internet banging” or “cyber banging” is used to threat, provoke, and taunt rival gang members and gangs. “Internet banging” or “cyber banging” can incite violent reactions when gang members are responding and replying to each other on the internet. This can also lead to violence on the street. This literature review will describe and explain how gang members utilize social media to incite gang violence and gang murders offline and how can we use social media and other alternatives to prevent gang violence. In my research I have conducted a literature review of case studies regarding “internet banging” or “cyber banging”, how gangs and gang members use social media to “gang bang”, how has social media changed the way gangs interact or conduct gang actions, and how the Chicago Police Department polices social media

    Spartan Daily, September 13, 2000

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    Volume 115, Issue 9https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9577/thumbnail.jp

    The Cord Weekly (November 27, 1959)

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    Spoken words

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    Chiefly tablesIncludes bibliographical referencesSupported in part by the National Institute of Education under contract no. US-NIE-C-400-76-011

    Presently tense| [Short stories]

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    Vista: November 14, 1985

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    https://digital.sandiego.edu/vista/1969/thumbnail.jp

    The New Hampshire, Vol. 75, No. 14 (Oct. 23, 1984)

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    The student publication of the University of New Hampshire

    The Maine Department of Transportation (MDOT) has spent $17 million over 17 year

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    The Maine Department of Transportation (MDOT) has spent 17millionover17yearsinitspursuittoconstructamarinecargoterminalonSearsIsland.Theprojecthasencounteredobstacles,mainlyduetoenvironmentalconcerns,butMDOTremainsoptimisticthattheportwillbecompleted.PortlandHarborhasbecomethedominantportinMaine,withthewholewaterfrontemploying3,700workers,doing17 million over 17 years in its pursuit to construct a marine cargo terminal on Sears Island. The project has encountered obstacles, mainly due to environmental concerns, but MDOT remains optimistic that the port will be completed. Portland Harbor has become the dominant port in Maine, with the whole waterfront employing 3,700 workers, doing 300 million worth of business and pouring millions into local tax coffers. Tom Valleau, Portland\u27s director of transportation and waterfront, doesn\u27t think Sears Island would take much of Portland\u27s business, but he doesn\u27t see the need to create a competitor just 100 miles up the coast. Details

    St. John Street in Portland has emerged as a business district with a range of r

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    St. John Street in Portland has emerged as a business district with a range of retail operations and an assortment of occupied office space, all without the benefit of city initiatives. Accessibility and parking are touted as key to the area\u27s viability as a business district, but other qualities are at work that draw a clientele from throughout the city. Most of the businesses at Union Station Plaza are generating income, and the First Atlantic Building is near capacity. Sea Dogs fans traverse the area before and after games at nearby Hadlock Field, and the proposed train station could bring more people into the St. John Street corridor. Details

    Mirror - Vol. 20, No. 18 - April 04, 1996

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    The Mirror (sometimes called the Fairfield Mirror) is the official student newspaper of Fairfield University, and is published weekly during the academic year (September - May). It runs from 1977 - the present; current issues are available online.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/archives-mirror/1437/thumbnail.jp
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