打电话:被感知的种族如何影响报警的欲望?

IF 1.8 2区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Journal of Experimental Criminology Pub Date : 2023-05-12 DOI:10.1007/s11292-023-09571-z
Justin L Sola, Charis E Kubrin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标:关于是什么影响了求助,尽管它们起源于美国绝大多数的警察干预措施,但几乎没有学者对此进行研究。我们测试了种族认知、模糊的情境背景和参与者的人口统计如何影响报警意愿。方法:我们对2038名参与者进行了一项全国性的调查实验,参与者的种族构成(被描述为黑人或白人)和事件的严重性(不太严重、更模糊或更严重、不太模糊)各不相同,以测试两个结果:1)报警的愿望和2)感知到的威胁。结果:感知到的种族不会直接影响平均报警意愿或感知到的威胁。然而,政治观点缓和了种族的影响:与政治温和的参与者相比,非常自由的参与者表达了更少的报警愿望,而非常保守的参与者在一个以年轻黑人男性为主角的小插曲中表达了更多的报警愿望。结论:报警愿望的政治两极分化引发了对种族和少数民族发生更严重刑事司法系统事件(包括逮捕和监禁)的种族差异风险的质疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Making the call: how does perceived race affect desire to call the police?

Objectives: There is little scholarship about what affects calls for service, even as they originate the vast majority of police interventions in the USA. We test how racial perceptions, ambiguous situational contexts, and participant demographics affect desire to call the police.

Methods: We conduct a nationwide survey experiment with 2,038 participants, varying vignette racial composition (subjects described as black or white) and seriousness of event (less serious, more ambiguous or more serious, less ambiguous) to test two outcomes: 1) desire to call the police and 2) perceived threat.

Results: Perceived race does not directly affect mean desire to call the police or perceived threat. However, political views moderate the effects of race: compared to politically moderate participants, very liberal participants express less desire to call the police while very conservative participants express more desire to call the police in a vignette featuring young Black men.

Conclusions: The political polarization of desire to call the police raises questions about racially differentiated risk of more serious criminal justice system events, including arrest and incarceration, for racial and ethnic minorities.

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来源期刊
Journal of Experimental Criminology
Journal of Experimental Criminology CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
49
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Criminology focuses on high quality experimental and quasi-experimental research in the advancement of criminological theory and/or the development of evidence based crime and justice policy. The journal is also committed to the advancement of the science of systematic reviews and experimental methods in criminology and criminal justice. The journal seeks empirical papers on experimental and quasi-experimental studies, systematic reviews on substantive criminological and criminal justice issues, and methodological papers on experimentation and systematic review. The journal encourages submissions from scholars in the broad array of scientific disciplines that are concerned with criminology as well as crime and justice problems.
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