How Representation Reduces Minority Criminal Victimization: Evidence from Scheduled Castes in India

Abhay Aneja, S K Ritadhi
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Abstract

In this paper, we consider whether the representation of historically disenfranchised minorities in government can reduce violence suffered by these groups. To answer this question, we examine the impact of political parties that represent India’s marginalized Scheduled Castes (SCs). We address the endogenous selection of minority-favoring parties using state-level variation in aggregations of close election outcomes. We find that a 10 percentage-point increase in representation reduces the minority murder rate by 3 percentage points. An analysis of channels suggests that politicians respond to minority constituents by increasing police effort in responding to the victimization of SCs, which may have the effect of deterring future offenders. Moreover, improvements in self-reported attitudes toward government institutions suggest that our results are not the product of negative reporting bias in government crime statistics (JEL: J15, D72, K14).
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代表性如何减少少数民族犯罪受害:来自印度排期种姓的证据
在本文中,我们考虑历史上被剥夺公民权的少数民族在政府中的代表是否可以减少这些群体遭受的暴力。为了回答这个问题,我们研究了代表印度边缘化排名表种姓(SCs)的政党的影响。我们利用各州在势均力敌的选举结果汇总中的变化来解决支持少数党的内生选择问题。我们发现,代表人数每增加10个百分点,少数族裔谋杀率就会降低3个百分点。一项对渠道的分析表明,政治家通过加大警察力度来应对少数族裔选民的受害行为,这可能会对未来的罪犯产生威慑作用。此外,自我报告对政府机构态度的改善表明,我们的结果不是政府犯罪统计中负面报告偏见的产物(JEL: J15, D72, K14)。
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