“…Tough‐on‐crime criminal justice policies that emerged in recent decades occurred alongside of, and arguably have contributed to, racial disparities in the arrest, conviction, and sentencing of Blacks (Clear and Frost, ; Kutateladze et al., ; Mears and Cochran, ; Petersilia, ; Sampson and Lauritsen, ; Ulmer and Laskorunsky, ). The racialization of crime—that is, the equating of Blacks with criminality and, conversely, of criminality with Blacks—has been implicated in numerous accounts of such disparities (Baumer, ; Garland, , ; Peterson, ; Tonry, ; Travis, ; Unnever and Gabbidon, ). Many of these accounts draw on racial threat theory (Blalock, ; Liska, ).…”