“…Beyond the conceptual, this analysis builds on the long tradition in sociolegal studies of analyzing disparate criminal justice outcomes between racial minorities and whites. Approaches for evaluating discrimination under the law vary, ranging from analyses of racial bias in criminal sentencing (see, e.g., Crawford, Chiricos, and Kleck 2006; Kautt 2009; Doerner and Demuth 2010) to the disparate impact of the war on drugs on racial minorities (for a review, see Provine 2011) to the contextual factors such as victim race and gender that moderate the increased burden faced by racial minorities under the criminal justice enterprise (see, e.g., Baldus, Pulaski, and Woodworth 1983; Holcomb, Williams, and Demuth 2004; Hoppe 2015). Collectively, sociolegal scholars argue that these factors contribute to a system of mass incarceration that helps maintain and exacerbate racial inequality in the United States (Garland 1990,2001; Alexander 2010; Wacquant 2010; Rios 2011; Pettit 2012).…”