2nd Edition
Latino Homicide Immigration, Violence, and Community
1. INTRODUCTION: LATINOS AND VIOLENT CRIME 2. THE LEGACY AND IMAGES OF LATINO CRIME 3. THE EMERGENCE OF LATINOS AND LATINO COMMUNITIES: LOCAL CONTEXT AND CONTEMPORARY CRIME 4. THE ORIGINS OF LATINO COMMUNITIES 5. THE ROOTS OF HOMICIDE IN THE BARRIO AND ENCLAVE 6. THE ETHNIC AND IMMIGRANT HOMICIDE CONTRAST 7. RHETORIC AND REALITY: LATINO HOMICIDE MOTIVES 8. THE SAN ANTONIO BARRIO BECKONS, 1950-2010 9. CONCLUSION: STILL MOVING BEYOND RACE AND HOMICIDE RESEARCH
Biography
Ramiro Martínez, Jr. is a Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice and the Department of Sociology and Anthropology. Over the past fifteen years, Dr. Martinez has received several honors and awards. In 2011, he was a recipient of American Society of Criminology DPCC's Lifetime Achievement for outstanding scholarship in the area of race, crime, and justice. A native of San Antonio, Texas he now resides in Boston Massachusetts.
"The first edition of Latino Homicide introduced a landmark study that galvanized a generation of researchers toward understanding the Latino paradox. Ten years later, the second edition situates Dr. Martinez’s methodological rigor during a time of continued anti-immigrant rhetoric and punitive immigration policies. This story of six urban Latino communities demonstrates the importance of utilizing hard evidence and empirical research to inform policy."
Robert J. Durán, Sociology, University of Tennessee, and author of Gang Life in Two Cities: An Insider’s Journey
"This is an excellent book which pays important attention to homicide rates within Latino communities. This book is a timely contribution because it explores the intersections of crime, economic disadvantage, and immigration in the United States. It makes a compelling point that Latino communities are more resilient to poverty which reduces homicide rates in their communities. It is indeed a must read for criminologists, sociologists and scholars who study stratification and inequality across places."
-Patricia Warren, Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University
"Hispanics will constitute nearly one-third of all Americans by 2050, with a much larger fraction of our youthful population, and whether they tend to have high crime rates or ordinary crime rates will largely determine the future of our society. Yet this vital question has been almost totally ignored by the academic community, allowing the often lurid ideological claims of media pundits to fill the vacuum. Therefore, LATINO HOMICIDE by Prof. Ramiro Martinez, Jr. constitutes a uniquely important and welcome contribution to this important but underexamined topic."
Ron Unz, Former Publisher of The American Conservative, Author of "The Myth of Hispanic Crime"






