Saturday, August 21, 2010

Children murdered in Chicago in 2009



I have collated the same information as for my 2010 map for 2009. 76 children (meaning to me under the age of 18) were murdered in Chicago last year. The above is an attempt to collate and present that data, information, and those lives.

I will repeat the information below that I have put in each of the other posts:

I started putting these databases together out a sense of frustration and helplessness over what is happening to youth in Chicago over the past few years.

While I work in education and have also done some work in regards to educational reform and protest, I still felt relatively stifled in my role and what I felt were my responsibilities. Each one of these charts is an attempt to address the frustration I felt in a language I felt I could express myself in.

When I started to get my Masters in Library Science last year I had a very limited idea of the role of a librarian that was based on old stereotypes of a type of professional that probably never existed outside of pop culture. It is in my role as a budding "informational professional" ( a somewhat funny sounding term to me to be honest). The work done in compiling these maps and graphs is fully within how I now see the role of a "librarian": Someone who checks out books to be sure but is also involved in the archiving of the community that they live in. In this case that being Chicago.

In 2009, 76 children were murdered in Chicago. At that time as in 2008, there was a sense of weary sadness at that number and it has not a feeling that has gone away. The problem for me was at the end of the CPS school year in June I wanted to find the numbers for how many children had been killed over the course of the school year that passed. I found my self surprised that this information was not particularly easy to come by.

After looking through various resources and finally finding the "Data" section of the Chicago Tribune's Redeye site I was able to uild these maps off of the data provided by their fine site. Tracy Swartz and Drew Sottardi do an excellent job on that site compiling and presenting a host of information that more Chicagoans should know about.

I also suggest looking at the excellent Crime Lab site of the University of Chicago for another source of data driven reports and possible solutions to the 3rd world level of violence that is currently afflicting Chicago's streets.

The title is linked to the raw data that I have compiled in spreadsheet form. If anyone wishes to use this raw data please feel free to. I have created it to be shared, amended, corrected, and built on.

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