2022
DOI: 10.1108/pijpsm-02-2022-0020
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Does racial discrimination matter: explaining perceived police bias across four racial/ethnic groups

Abstract: PurposeThis study uses a diverse sample of residents living in Northern California to study factors that are associated with public perceptions of police bias. The authors also investigate whether perceptions of racial discrimination mediate the relationships between race/ethnicity and perceptions of police bias.Design/methodology/approachThe sampling frame of the study was constructed through two stages. First, the frame included 212 census tracts in the study setting that comprise the study population. The a… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Most studies were cross-sectional, with eight (50%) using data collected from one or more samples at a single time point (Baluran, 2022;De Trinidad Young et al, 2022;Graziano and Gauthier, 2019;Vogel, 2011;Wu et al, 2011Wu et al, , 2012Wu et al, , 2013Yuan et al, 2022). Seven (43.7%) studies were repeated cross-sectional, meaning the data were collected from different people over more than one period such as 60 months of state-level hospital ER admissions (Chu and Song, 2015;Edwards et al, 2019;Greenleaf et al, 2008;Medina et al, 2022;Moon and Corley, 2007;Mooney et al, 2018;Schwartz and Jahn, 2022).…”
Section: Research Designsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Most studies were cross-sectional, with eight (50%) using data collected from one or more samples at a single time point (Baluran, 2022;De Trinidad Young et al, 2022;Graziano and Gauthier, 2019;Vogel, 2011;Wu et al, 2011Wu et al, , 2012Wu et al, , 2013Yuan et al, 2022). Seven (43.7%) studies were repeated cross-sectional, meaning the data were collected from different people over more than one period such as 60 months of state-level hospital ER admissions (Chu and Song, 2015;Edwards et al, 2019;Greenleaf et al, 2008;Medina et al, 2022;Moon and Corley, 2007;Mooney et al, 2018;Schwartz and Jahn, 2022).…”
Section: Research Designsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Just under one-half of the studies (43.8%, n 5 7) used a population of cases or incidents such as traffic citations issued (Moon and Corley, 2007;Greenleaf et al, 2008;Ozkan et al, 2016;Mooney et al, 2018;Edwards et al, 2019;Schwartz and Jahn, 2022;Medina et al, 2022). Five studies (31.2%) used nonprobability samples (Wu et al, 2011(Wu et al, , 2012(Wu et al, , 2013Baluran, 2022;Chu and Song, 2015), and two studies (12.5%) used mixed sampling designs (Graziano and Gauthier, 2019;Yuan et al, 2022). One study (6.25%) employed a probability sampling method (Vogel, 2011).…”
Section: Contextual Focus Sample Designs and Sample Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It remains unknown how immigrant generational status may affect people's views on police procedural justice, net of relevant controls such as race and ethnicity. Given the critical importance of immigrants’ perception of police procedural justice, which can impact their sense of obligation to obey police directives and willingness to cooperate with the police (Murphy and Mazerolle 2018; Pryce, Johnson, and Maguire 2017), perceptions of police bias (Wu, Smith, and Sun 2013; Yuan, Wu, and Melde 2022), and satisfaction with the police (Pryce 2018), it is critical to assess the effect of foreign‐born status, including immigrant generational status, on people's judgments of police procedural justice in the United States.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%