Fr. 77.00

Racial Profiling and the NYPD - The Who, What, When, and Why of Stop and Frisk

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book analyzes New York City's stop-and-frisk data both pre- and post-constitutionality ruling, examining the existence of both profiling and unequal treatment among the three largest groups identified in the database: Blacks, Whites, and Hispanics. The purpose for using these two time periods is to determine which group(s) benefited the most from the ruling. This research goes beyond standard statistics to identify the place that race holds in contributing to the stop disparities. Specifically, this research will adds a spatial element to the numbers by analyzing the determinants of stop location by race, applying a principal component analysis to a mixture of census and stop-and-frisk data to determine the influence of location on stops by race. The results present a way of determining the plausibility of stops being the product of racial profiling-or just a matter of happenstance.

List of contents

1. Introduction.- 2. In the Shadow of Lady Liberty.- 3. Broken Windows or Breaking Communities.- 4. The Impact of Broken Window on Police Practices in New York City.- 4. Analytical Methods.- 5. Analytical Results.- 6. Discussion and Conclusion.

About the author

Jay L. Newberry is Assistant Professor of Geography at Binghamton University

Summary

This book analyzes New York City’s stop-and-frisk data both pre- and post-constitutionality ruling, examining the existence of both profiling and unequal treatment among the three largest groups identified in the database: Blacks, Whites, and Hispanics. The purpose for using these two time periods is to determine which group(s) benefited the most from the ruling. This research goes beyond standard statistics to identify the place that race holds in contributing to the stop disparities. Specifically, this research will adds a spatial element to the numbers by analyzing the determinants of stop location by race, applying a principal component analysis to a mixture of census and stop-and-frisk data to determine the influence of location on stops by race. The results present a way of determining the plausibility of stops being the product of racial profiling–or just a matter of happenstance.

Product details

Authors Jay L Newberry, Jay L. Newberry
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.07.2017
 
EAN 9783319580906
ISBN 978-3-31-958090-6
No. of pages 77
Dimensions 153 mm x 220 mm x 12 mm
Weight 220 g
Illustrations XI, 77 p. 6 illus. in color.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Urban and regional sociology

C, Städte, Stadtgemeinden, Verbrechen und Kriminologie (Kriminalistik), police, Social Sciences, Urban Sociology, Crime & criminology, Sociology, Urban, Urban Studies/Sociology, Urban communities, Policing, Crime Control and Security, criminal justice, Geography of Social Control

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