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Race, Gender, and the Perception of Recently Experiencing Unfair Treatment by the Police: Exploratory Results From an All-Black Sample

NCJ Number
233739
Journal
Criminal Justice Review Volume: 36 Issue: 1 Dated: March 2011 Pages: 5-21
Author(s)
Shaun L. Gabbidon; George E. Higgins; Hillary Potter
Date Published
March 2011
Length
17 pages
Annotation
This study examined the treatment of Black men and women by police.
Abstract
Using a national poll with a representative sample of Blacks (N = 854), this article examined the experiences of those Blacks who believe that they had recently been treated unfairly by the police. More specifically, the research examined the role of gender in the perception of unfair treatment by the police. The results of the analysis from the full sample found that age (being older), region (being from the South), and being female decreased the likelihood of reporting having been recently treated unfairly by the police. To examine the differences between Black men and women, the authors conducted a split-sample binary logistic regression analysis. The analysis revealed that Black women who resided in the South were less likely to report experiencing unfair treatment by the police. For Black men, being older and having a higher income resulted in the reduced likelihood of the perception of having been treated unfairly. The implications of the research also are considered. (Published Abstract) Tables,notes, and references