Data on police stops can be
examined to reflect on the relative "opacity" of these encounters and
how aggregate patterns on the nature-not just the volume-of reported stops
relate to public scrutiny of the police.
We hypothesize that public scrutiny on
police stops is positively related to the prevalence of opaque stop practices
across dimensions of "intrusiveness," "rationale," and
"setting" derived from agency records. We further argue that this
relationship is influenced by neighborhood conditions in the form of
concentrated disadvantage, residential instability, and heterogeneity.
To
develop these ideas, we draw on a publicly available NYPD dataset on police
stops to specify a series of fixed and random effects models that describe
variation in recorded stop practices across precincts (N = 74) and overtime
(T = 7, 2007-2013). We relate these practices to neighborhood conditions
derived from the Census and examine their association with rates of SQF
complaints to the CCRB.
Results show considerable variation in indicators of
opacity, particularly across precincts. More importantly, we also find that
rates of complaints are higher in precincts that have more vaguely defined,
intrusive stops.
Results also suggest that concentrated disadvantage is
independently and positively related with higher rates of public scrutiny of
the police.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/n0myhu
By: Rengifo AF1, Fowler K2.
1School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University, 123
Washington St, Suite 554, Newark, NJ, 07102, USA. arengifo@rutgers.edu.
2School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University, 123
Washington St, Suite 554, Newark, NJ, 07102, USA. kurt.fowler@rutgers.edu.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
No comments:
Post a Comment