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PARTICIPANTS
Fresno
Los
Angeles
Oakland
Oxnard
Richmond Sacramento
Salinas San
Bernardino
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Santa
Rosa
Stockton
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MISSION
STATEMENT
The
National Council on Crime and Delinquency
(NCCD) and the National League
of Cities' Institute for Youth, Education
and Families (YEF Institute) have
initiated a network of 13 major
cities
in California to combat gang
violence and victimization.
The
California Cities Gang Prevention Network,
the first of its kind in the
nation,
focuses on successful
policies and practices
that
interweave prevention,
intervention,
enforcement, and a community's
"moral voice"
as an alternative to
prison-only solutions. |
CONTACT
US
Contact
Livier Gutierrez at:
Phone (800) 306-6223
Email lgutierrez@nccdglobal.org
1970
Broadway
Suite 500
Oakland, CA 94612
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WHAT'S
NEW:
Promising Developments
for Sustainability of Local
Efforts
This policy and practice brief offers a snapshot of the emerging and
promising developments, and
changed ways of doing business,
in several California Cities Gang
Prevention Network cities. These
developments, growing organically
from cities' comprehensive plans,
offer various routes to sustaining
local youth and gang violence prevention efforts.
Case Studies and Analysis
of Local Funding Strategies
In this paper, the California Cities Gang Prevention Network
undertook an analysis of the status
and implications of multiple grant
funding sources in the cities of
Oakland, Salinas, and Santa Rosa
to enhance understanding of the
benefits and tradeoffs of this approach and to produce policy
recommendations regarding future
funding. |
FUNDING
The
California Cities Gang
Prevention Network is
funded by grants from
the
California Endowment,
the
The California Wellness
Foundation (TCWF), the
East Bay Community
Foundation, the Richmond
Children's Fund, and
the
Evelyn and Walter Haas,
Jr.
Fund.
The
California Endowment
is a private, statewide
health foundation created
in 1996 with a mission
to expand access to
affordable, quality
health
care for underserverd
indiv-
iduals and communities,
and to promote fundamental
improvements in the
health
status of all Californians.
Created
in 1992 as an
independent, private
found-
ation, TCWF's mission
is to
improve the health of
the
people of California
by
making grants for health
promotion, wellness
educa-
tion and disease prevention.
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PROJECT
GOALS
To
get in front of the gang issue
before policies based
on fear divert
funds from essential
infrastructures
(e.g., schools, police,
services for
children and youth)
to corrections.
To
establish or improve collaboration
in each city that appropriately
blends
prevention, intervention,
and
suppression, and that
involves city
leaders and community
stakeholders.
To
identify and document city
responses to key program
and policy
questions (e.g., essential
approaches
to anti-gang efforts;
what doesn't
work; who must be involved,
etc.).
To
forge a vibrant peer-learning
network among 13 participating
cities.
To
identify state policy and practice
that would support effective
community practice.
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