Through its community based affiliate organizations and special projects, the
CAP staff collectively provides human and financial resources to its affiliates
to promote leadership in youth, their parents and their entire community.
Who is Clifford R. Shaw?
A sociologist who devoted his life to finding the causes of crime in large
cities, Clifford R. Shaw came from a small community in rural Indiana. He was
born in 1896 in Luray, Indiana, the fifth of ten children. His father was a
farmer and owned a small general store.
Shaw often related his own brush with delinquency as a young boy. Caught
stealing bolts from a blacksmith, Shaw was initially scolded by the blacksmith
and then asked why he took the bolts. Later, the blacksmith helped Shaw repair
his toy wagon with the bolts. This experience was used by Shaw to illustrate
small town reaction to delinquency, and the importance of reincorporating the
offender into conventional society became a key component in his methods to
dissuade a youngster from committing future crimes.
While in graduate school at the University of Chicago, Shaw worked part-time
from 1921 - 1923 as a parole officer for the Illinois State Training School for
Boys at St. Charles, Illinois. From 1924 - 1926, he was a parole officer at the
Cook County Juvenile Court. Many of his ideas grew out of these "real life"
experiences, as well as his association with colleagues at the University of
Chicago Institute for Juvenile Research.
In 1927, Shaw was appointed director for the newly created Department of
Research Sociology. Working with Henry McKay, whom Shaw had known in graduate
school, he plotted the residences of official delinquents on maps of Chicago
and found them to be overwhelmingly concentrated in areas adjacent to commerce
and industry. This concentration of crime in specific areas over long periods
of time was offered as striking evidence against the then-popular theory that
psychological factors were the cause of crime.
Shaw also developed the use of the personal life-history of individual
delinquents and criminals, which he gathered through contacts at reform schools
and prisons. Several were published containing the official juvenile and
criminal records of the individual along with the delinquent's biography told
in his own words. In 1930, the first of these autobiographies, The Jack Roller,
was published and it became a classic in criminology. The life-history approach
was used by Shaw to explain how the social factors which dominated areas of
high crime were responsible for encouraging delinquent a acts, not any
particular personality flaws on the part of the delinquent.
In 1932, the Chicago Area Project was begun in three of the city's highest crime
areas to text juvenile delinquency prevention techniques. AS director of the
research department and later as Cap's first director, Shaw developed both
private and public sources of funding to expand the program to other areas of
Chicago throughout the 40s. His failing health during the last ten years of his
life lessened his activist role and he died in 1957 before the full impact of
the Chicago Area Project on public policy was realized.
The Chicago Area Project became the prototype for delinquency prevention and
welfare programs. Its principles of community organization, self-determination,
and using natural leaders indigenous to a neighborhood were quite radical when
first proposed by Shaw in the early 1930s, but are used by many groups today to
successfully solve local problems.
What is CAP's Mission?
The Chicago Area Project (CAP is a private, not-for-profit organization with a
distinguished history and demonstrable track record of over sixty years of work
in delinquency prevention and service in disadvantaged urban neighborhoods. The
original mission of CAP has not changed since its inception:
To work toward the prevention and eradication of juvenile delinquency through
the development and support of affiliated local community self-help efforts, in
communities where the need is greatest.
What is CAP's Philosophy?
Chicago Area Project's philosophy is to improve the quality of neighborhood life
with a special focus on solving problems faced by young people and their
families. The agency believes that residents must be empowered through the
development of community organizations so that they can act together to improve
neighborhood conditions, hold institutions serving the community accountable,
reduce anti-social behavior by young people, protect them from inappropriate
institutionalization, and provide them with positive models for personal
development.
What are CAP’s goals?
The goals of Chicago Area Project are to develop special projects and establish
locally controlled organizations that implement the directives put forth in
Cap's mission and philosophy. Projects and affiliates are mandated to
positively impact areas in the Chicago vicinity with high rates of juvenile
delinquency or other symptoms of social disorganization
What are CAP's Objectives?
The objectives for Chicago Area Project projects and affiliated organizations
include the following:
- To develop local leadership broadly representative of the communities that are
being served.
- To conduct an annual community survey to assess needs and develop an action
plan with a clear set of goals and objectives.
- To improve the climate for the positive development of young people by
achieving such improvements as increases in educational achievement levels and
vocational skills.
- To develop young people's leadership skills by involving them in youth
initiated community improvement activities or in cooperative projects with
adults.
- To set measurable goals and show progress in improving undesirable conditions.
- To demonstrate an ability to raise funds, manage staff, and be accountable
financially and programmatically.
- To promote and inform the community about all programs.
- To develop a referral/resource network with other agencies and institutions.
- To develop and maintain all contractual record keeping documents as required.
What is the CAP model?
The CAP model uses a three pronged approach to address issues affecting youth,
families, and communities:
Advocacy: Chicago Area Project is dedicated to advocacy on behalf of youth and
other resident concerns.
Direct Service: CAP provides direct service for youth and adults.
Community Organizing: CAP facilitates community organizing directed toward
improving the quality of neighborhood life.
CAP believes in strengthening Chicago’s neighborhoods through action Nothing offers a greater chance for raising a
child who shares society
’s values than a neighborhood where everyone works together in a positive,
cooperative way to care for the children growing up in their community, But how
do you mobilize a neighborhood? How do you get people to work together? Can a
child survive the complicated urban problems our inner-city neighborhoods face?
The answer lies in tapping the natural leadership and concern for community
found within each neighborhood. While some delinquency prevention programs try
to impose outside policies upon local residents, the Chicago Area Project
’s philosophy is to encourage the people who lice in the neighborhood to seek
their own solutions. This is done by forming a community committee as the
primary force for change. The committee consists of local citizens who
encourage participation and effective representation in decisions affecting
their neighborhood.
The Chicago Area Project has over 40 affiliates and special projects throughout
the city. Over the years, the programs and issues have changed, just as the
neighborhood change. But the democratic ideals of self-determination and
self-improvement remain the same and these key principles of the Chicago Area
Project continue to serve its neighborhood.
What is a CAP affiliate?
An Affiliate is a community organization formally accepted by CAP to become part
of its organizational structure. Acceptance is based on commitment to adhere to
the CAP program model. Affiliates are an integral part of Cap's contractual
arrangement with funders. Resources from CAP are detailed in bilateral
agreement documents between CAP and each affiliate.
What are the guidelines for affiliates?
A community organization formally accepted by CAP to become part of its
organizational structure must follow the following guidelines. Acceptance is
based on commitment to adhere to CAP program model expressed through the
following operational standards:
- Have written bylaws outlining governance principle of leadership.
- Governance structure is based on democratic principles of leadership.
- Organization operation comports with democratic principles of leadership.
- Has a membership base comprised at least 51% community residents.
- Non-sectarian in all respects (e.g. membership, participation not based on
race, religion, ethnicity, etc.).
- Maintains “good standing” status as a charitable organization.
- Federal tax exempt status is a goal.
- Complies with all local, state, and federal laws.
- Adheres to all CAP’s policies and governing affiliates.
- Complies with all contracts and agreements with respect to specific programs.
- Meets program/service targets as well as resource obligations of
contract/agreement.