2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2005.04.007
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Predicting the employment of minority officers in U.S. cities: OLS fixed-effect panel model results for African American and Latino officers for 1993, 1996, and 2000

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Cited by 27 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with their earlier research, Zhao et al (2005) report that the percentage of blacks is positively related to the percentage of black police officers (b ¼ 0:52, p , 0:05).…”
Section: Pijpsm 334supporting
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Consistent with their earlier research, Zhao et al (2005) report that the percentage of blacks is positively related to the percentage of black police officers (b ¼ 0:52, p , 0:05).…”
Section: Pijpsm 334supporting
confidence: 85%
“…In addition to their cross-sectional examinations of the determinants of black employment as police officers, Zhao et al (2005) collected panel data at three points in time and conducted a pooled time series analysis of the determinants of several measures of minority police force size. Consistent with their earlier research, Zhao et al (2005) report that the percentage of blacks is positively related to the percentage of black police officers (b ¼ 0:52, p , 0:05).…”
Section: Pijpsm 334mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the absence of a fixed-effects assumption, pooled time series models using cross-sectionally dominant data will explain variation across units and over time, but most of the explained variance will be across units (Zhao, He, & Lovrich, 2005). Thus, pooled time-series analysis with a random effects assumption and the observation of a significant and negatively signed coefficient means that units with higher percentages of Latinos in a job category tend to have lower percentages of Blacks or vice versa.…”
Section: Addressing Previous Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Klinger and Brunson [4] also advise that sharing research findings regarding officers' perceptions during deadly force encounters may prove informing to the public. Additionally, since the 1970s and more so through the 1990s, police departments, specifically the larger ones, have become more diverse and representative of the minority populations they serve [5,28]. In their study predicting the employment of minority officers, Zhao et al [28] found that the presence of a minority police chief and city mayor was correlated with the increased representation of minority officers in the police department.…”
Section: Public Perception Of Police Use Of Deadly Forcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, since the 1970s and more so through the 1990s, police departments, specifically the larger ones, have become more diverse and representative of the minority populations they serve [5,28]. In their study predicting the employment of minority officers, Zhao et al [28] found that the presence of a minority police chief and city mayor was correlated with the increased representation of minority officers in the police department. The authors further indicate that the increased representation may be related to an enhanced pool of applicants from the community.…”
Section: Public Perception Of Police Use Of Deadly Forcementioning
confidence: 99%