CPOY

CPOY 69 Documentary Award of Excellence: Violent Times

Often, traumatic stress is only thought in regards of soldier returning from war. However, it exists everyday in the lives of many people living in cities in the United States that have never placed a foot in Iraq or Afghanistan. For the past four years, I have been documenting crime and the effects of a culture of violence in cities in United States to bring attention to it’s lasting emotional and psychological consequences. Violent crime, poverty, drugs, gangs, and high rates of unemployment are problems that often go unanswered in many of America’s cities. This leaves many families and local communities suffering, which only perpetuates further violence.

Caption
Slide 1 of 12
July 26, 2013
Jorge Categena, 11, was hit by a stray bullet two years ago on his way to a corner store in Camden. He is missing one eye and is blind in the other. Jorge is one of the many youth living in Camden affected by violence at an early age. The city of 70,000, often considered the most violent in the United States, saw a record amount of homicides in 2013 with 67.
Andrew Renneisen / Syracuse University
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