Join Books.org — it's free

Juvenile Delinquency, Criminology - General & Miscellaneous, Organized Crime, Asian American Studies - General & Miscellaneous, Southeast Asian American Studies
The Dream Shattered: Vietnamese Gangs in America by Patrick Du Phuoc Long β€” book cover

The Dream Shattered: Vietnamese Gangs in America

by Patrick Du Phuoc Long, Laura Ricard
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

In this eloquent account, Patrick Du Phuoc Long discusses why so many children of Indochinese refugees who fled to the U.S. after the Vietnam War are turning to gang life. Du Phuoc Long interweaves the true stories of Indochinese youths with his personal experiences as a trusted counselor to Vietnamese children.

Synopsis

An eloquent account of the economic, social, and cultural difficulties that disrupt traditional family relationships and push young people into acts of violent, often ruthless, crime.

Publishers Weekly

Not a comprehensive study, this anecdotal book, based on the author's experience as a juvenile counselor in California, provides some valuable news about the factors contributing to the unfortunate growth of Vietnamese gangs and crime in the U.S. Many of his counselees are children of uneducated refugees, and they have materialistic American cravings their parents cannot fathom. Vietnamese parenting values run counter to American individualism and self-expression, according to Du Phuoc Long, leading parents to feel powerless when their newly emboldened children challenge them. When schools do not welcome them and society views them as alien, such youths turn to gangs for acceptance. Many of these gangs prey on the Vietnamese community itself, even on its members' own relatives. The author warns against a reliance on prisons as the solution; instead, he proposes more counseling and intervention programs to provide better options for gang-bound youth. Co-author Ricard is a freelance writer. (Dec.)

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Not a comprehensive study, this anecdotal book, based on the author's experience as a juvenile counselor in California, provides some valuable news about the factors contributing to the unfortunate growth of Vietnamese gangs and crime in the U.S. Many of his counselees are children of uneducated refugees, and they have materialistic American cravings their parents cannot fathom. Vietnamese parenting values run counter to American individualism and self-expression, according to Du Phuoc Long, leading parents to feel powerless when their newly emboldened children challenge them. When schools do not welcome them and society views them as alien, such youths turn to gangs for acceptance. Many of these gangs prey on the Vietnamese community itself, even on its members' own relatives. The author warns against a reliance on prisons as the solution; instead, he proposes more counseling and intervention programs to provide better options for gang-bound youth. Co-author Ricard is a freelance writer. (Dec.)

Booknews

A fascinating, troubling, and illuminating read that interweaves the true stories of young Vietnamese involved in gang life and violent crime with the author's personal experiences as a counselor to young Vietnamese offenders in Santa Clara County, California. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
February 1, 1997
Publisher
Northeastern University Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781555533144

Similar books