Race/Ethnicity and Crime
Module 14 considers how the meaning of race impacts criminological theory and criminal justice practice. A brief review of the history of race is used to contextualize how modern criminological theory, e.g., sociobiology, was influenced and contributed to forms of institutional racism. In addition, the module provides a cursory historical review of race in the areas of the American legal system and politics. Moreover, the module includes a review of pre to post Civil War eras, which provided the foundation for several criminal cases brought against private individuals for discrimination. The module concludes with the timeframe of 1960 to the present and includes an essential discussion of the death penalty as an example of racially influenced punishment.
Learning Objectives
After completing this module, you should be able to:
- discuss the history of race as a source of conflict between one human group against another.
- explain how the intersection of race and crime complicate social science inquiry.
- illustrate how race has tainted legal proceedings and enforcement of the criminal law.
- describe how Jim Crow laws were enacted and used to enforce segregation between the white and minority populations.
- discuss the disproportionate involvement of minorities with street crime.
- identify seminal and modern sociobiological theories of crime causation.
- summarize the Human Genome Project (HGP).
- discuss how race is related to the disproportionate number of African Americans who are executed at a rate much greater than whites in the American Criminal Justice System.
Summary
Race/ethnicity and crime remain sensitive and contentious topics that have been subject to extensive research, debate, and public discourse. It is important to approach this discussion with an understanding that crime is a complex issue influenced by multiple factors, and attributing criminal behavior solely to race or ethnicity would be an oversimplification.
Numerous studies have consistently shown that certain racial and ethnic groups, particularly Black and Hispanic individuals, are overrepresented in various stages of the criminal justice system, including arrests, convictions, and incarcerations. These disparities have led to concerns about racial profiling, discrimination, and unequal treatment within the justice system.
Crime rates are closely related to socioeconomic factors, and communities experiencing poverty and limited access to education and job opportunities tend to have higher crime rates. Racial and ethnic minorities are more likely to face economic challenges due to historical and systemic inequalities, which may contribute to higher crime rates in those communities.
There have been well-documented cases of racial bias and discriminatory policing practices, leading to increased scrutiny of law enforcement’s treatment of racial and ethnic minorities. Instances of racial profiling and excessive use of force have further strained trust between minority communities and law enforcement agencies.
The history of institutional and structural racism in societies has perpetuated inequalities in education, housing, employment, and economic opportunities for racial and ethnic minorities. These inequalities can contribute to crime by limiting opportunities for advancement and fostering an environment of hopelessness and desperation in some communities.
Media portrayals of crime can perpetuate negative stereotypes about racial and ethnic minorities, leading to biases and prejudice among the public and law enforcement. This can result in biased perceptions of crime and criminality based on race or ethnicity.
It is important to consider intersectionality when discussing race/ethnicity and crime. People who belong to multiple marginalized groups, such as Black women or LGBTQ+ individuals of color, may experience unique challenges that can impact their interactions with the criminal justice system.
The relationship between race/ethnicity and crime is not unique to any specific country. Different societies have their historical and cultural contexts that influence crime rates and patterns, and these factors should also be considered in any analysis.
Addressing race/ethnicity and crime requires a multifaceted and comprehensive approach. This includes addressing systemic racism, promoting equal opportunities and resources, reforming policing practices, investing in education and social services, and supporting community-based interventions. It is essential to foster understanding, empathy, and open dialogue to create a fair and just society that respects the dignity and rights of all individuals, regardless of their race or ethnicity.
Key Takeaways
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Key Terms/Concepts
Click on the following key term/concept to view the definition:
Brown v. Board of Education
Civil Rights Act of 1871 (Ku Klux Klan Act)
Institutional Racism
Jim Crow Laws
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
Plessy v. Ferguson
Race
Racial Threat Theory
Racial Profiling
Segregation
Scottsboro Boys
Social Disorganization
Sociobiological Theories
Subculture-of-Violence
Modern Application
Douglas Heaven (July 2020) argues that, Predictive policing algorithms are racist. They need to be dismantled (MIT Technology Review).
- How big data might contribute to effective police work and increase public safety?
- How a predictive algorithm is potentially skewed by arrest rates?
- According to US Department of Justice figures, you are more than twice as likely to be arrested if you are Black than if you are white.
- According to Dorothy Roberts who studies law and social rights at the University of Pennsylvania, “Racism has always been about predicting, about making certain racial groups seem as if they are predisposed to do bad things and therefore justify controlling them,” she said.
Revisit the related modern application (AI and Criminal Justice) located within Module 4:
Read, Review, Watch and Listen
1. Read Chapter 17: Race/Ethnicity and Crime by Matthew Pate, State University of New York at Albany & William C. Plouffe Jr., Kutztown University.
- Print a copy or have access to this reading via a digital device for in class review and discussion.
- To support the student’s reading of the article, they can listen to a recorded version of the same. Note that listening to the article is not a substitute for a careful and directed reading of the document.
PART 1:
PART 2:
This Chapter:
- discusses the evolution of the concept of race, tracing it from early pseudoscientific hierarchies that rationalized social inequality to a modern understanding of race as a socially constructed mechanism that reinforces power imbalances.
- highlights various criminological theories addressing race and crime, such as sociobiological theories, the subculture of violence theory, and social disorganization theory, each presenting different perspectives on how racial dynamics may influence crime rates.
- explores the historical impact of race in American law and policy, illustrating how race has influenced legal decisions and public policy from the 17th century to the present, including major Supreme Court cases like Plessy v. Ferguson and Brown v. Board of Education.
- reviews racial discrimination in criminal justice enforcement, examining practices like racial profiling and the disproportionate application of punitive measures on minorities, exemplified by cases such as the Rodney King incident and “driving while black” lawsuits.
- examines the influence of social control theories, including racial threat theory, which suggests that as minority populations increase, dominant groups may impose stricter social controls out of perceived economic and political threat, reinforcing racial inequalities within the criminal justice system.
2. Review via the Urban Institute, racial-and-ethnic-disparities-throughout-the-criminal-legal-system (Susan Nembhard and Lily Robin, 2021).
According to this report:
a. The criminal legal system has roots in policies and laws that systematically oppressed people of color, such as Black Codes and Jim Crow laws. These laws were designed to control and segregate communities of color, shaping current disparities.
b. Implicit biases among law enforcement contribute to racial disparities in stops, searches, arrests, and use of force. Black and Latine individuals are disproportionately stopped and searched, despite comparable or lower rates of contraband possession compared to white individuals.
c. Judicial discretion often leads to harsher sentences for people of color. Black individuals face higher rates of pretrial detention, more severe charges, and harsher plea bargains, significantly impacting incarceration rates and durations.
d. Black individuals are overrepresented in parole and probation systems, with more conditions to satisfy and higher rates of revocation. Systemic biases affect decisions on parole and community supervision outcomes.
e. Risk assessment algorithms used in the criminal legal system often perpetuate racial bias. They rely on proxies, such as criminal history, that reflect systemic racism rather than individual risk factors, further entrenching disparities.
3. Review via the Pew Research Center, 10 things we know about race and policing in the U.S. (Drew DeSilver, Michael Lipka and Dalia Fahmy, 2020).
a. A significant majority of Black adults (84%) believe that Black people are treated less fairly than Whites in dealings with the police. This sentiment is shared by 63% of White adults.
b. Black adults are about five times as likely as Whites to report being unfairly stopped by police due to their race or ethnicity (44% vs. 9%). This experience is particularly prevalent among Black men, with 59% reporting such incidents.
c. Black Americans are less likely than Whites to express high confidence in the police. Only 14% of Black adults have a lot of confidence in their local police, compared to 42% of White adults.
d. Black adults are less likely than Whites to rate police positively in areas such as using the right amount of force, treating racial and ethnic groups equally, and holding officers accountable for misconduct.
e. A majority of Americans, including 66% of Black adults and 60% of White adults, support giving civilian oversight boards the power to investigate and discipline officers accused of misconduct.
4. Review the Death Penalty Information Center’s (DPIC) Facts about the Death Penalty Fact Sheet.
a. According to the DPIC, the death penalty has been imposed disproportionately on racial minorities throughout most of U.S. history.
b. Capital punishment advocates are more concerned with whether the death penalty is fairly imposed than whether there are ethnic differences in the rates of imposition.
c. They say that the focus should be on sentencing those who commit capital crimes to death, regardless of any social characteristic (race, ethnicity, gender, etc.).
d. The Washington-based Constitution Project has recommended that all jurisdictions imposing the death penalty should create mechanisms to help ensure it is not imposed in a racially discriminatory manner.
5. Review Scottsboro Boys (History, August 20, 2022) [last accessed August 2023].
a. The Scottsboro Boys were a group of nine African American teenagers who were falsely accused of raping two white women on a freight train in Alabama in 1931. The case gained national and international attention due to its blatant injustice and racial prejudice, becoming a symbol of the deeply ingrained racism and flawed legal system of the time.
b. The defendants faced all-white juries and were quickly convicted, with eight sentenced to death. The youngest, 13-year-old Leroy Wright, had a mistrial due to a hung jury.
c. In 1932, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the defendants had been denied the right to counsel, violating the 14th Amendment. This decision overturned the convictions and mandated new trials.
d. In 1935, the Supreme Court found that African Americans had been systematically excluded from juries, violating the defendants’ rights to equal protection. This ruling required further retrials.
e. The Scottsboro Boys case exposed deep-seated racial biases in the American legal system and set precedents for the right to adequate legal representation and the inclusion of Black citizens on juries.
6. Watch Racial Profiling 2.0 (CBS News, February 20, 2020) [last accessed August 2023].
7. Listen to NPR’s Author Interviews, Why the crack cocaine epidemic hit Black communities ‘first and worst’ (Mosley, T. July 13, 2023) [last accessed November 2024].
To access the PPT file, click HERE. Note that files are updated regularly and as such might change in content and appearance.
Read, Review, Watch and Listen to all listed materials by the due date listed within the course LMS (i.e., Blackboard) site.
Contact the professor with any course-related questions
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Discussion Questions
- How do socioeconomic conditions influence crime rates in racially and ethnically diverse communities, and what specific interventions can be implemented to address these root causes?
- What evidence supports the claim that racial and ethnic minorities are overrepresented in the criminal justice system, and what are the potential solutions to address these disparities?
- In what ways have documented cases of racial bias and discriminatory policing practices affected the trust between law enforcement and minority communities, and what steps can be taken to rebuild this trust?
- How do historical institutional and structural racism contribute to higher crime rates among racial and ethnic minorities, and what long-term strategies are necessary to break this cycle?
- How do media portrayals of crime shape public perceptions of racial and ethnic groups, and what can be done to ensure more balanced and accurate media representations?
Supplemental Resources
- U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics (January 2018), Race and Ethnicity of Violent Crime: Offenders and Arrestees, 2018 (Allen J. Beck, Ph.D., BJS Statistician)
- Prevalence rate of violent crime in the United States from 2014 to 2022, by race/ethnicity (Statista, Sep. 2023) [last accessed Nov. 2023]
- 2019 Crime In the United States: Arrests by Race and Ethnicity (FBI, 2019) [last accessed, Nov. 2023]
- NPR Code Switch
- What’s CODE SWITCH? It’s the fearless conversations about race that you’ve been waiting for. Hosted by journalists of color, our podcast tackles the subject of race with empathy and humor. We explore how race affects every part of society — from politics and pop culture to history, food and everything in between. This podcast makes all of us part of the conversation — because we’re all part of the story. Code Switch was named Apple Podcasts’ first-ever Show of the Year in 2020.
- The Appeal
- A podcast that discusses criminal justice reform and highlights stories of injustice, often focusing on how race and socioeconomic status influence legal processes.
Click HERE to learn more about Race and Racism in America (Sociology 2215) – This course is both a General Education Requirement and Transfer Oriented Elective.
References
Pate, M., & Plouffe, W. C., Jr. (2009). Race/Ethnicity and Crime. In J. M. Miller (Ed.), 21st Century Reference Series. 21st Century Criminology: A Reference Handbook (Vol. 1, pp. 133-143). SAGE Reference. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3201600027/GVRL?u=cod_lrc&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=a8a15167
The 1954 Supreme Court case that declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional, overturning Plessy v. Ferguson and marking a major victory in the Civil Rights Movement.
Legislation providing civil action against individuals who violated civil rights, originally aimed to curb violence and discrimination from groups like the Ku Klux Klan.
Also known as systemic racism, is a form of racism that is embedded within the policies, practices, and structures of social institutions, leading to the perpetuation of racial disparities and inequalities. Unlike individual acts of racism, which involve prejudiced beliefs or discriminatory actions by individuals, institutional racism operates at a broader societal level and affects entire communities or racial/ethnic groups.
A series of state and local laws enacted in the United States from the late 19th century through the mid-20th century. These laws enforced racial segregation and discrimination, primarily targeting African Americans and other racial minorities, particularly in the Southern states.
The term "Jim Crow" originated from a caricature of a Black man used in minstrel shows in the 19th century, which perpetuated racial stereotypes. The Jim Crow laws were a response to the Reconstruction Era (1865-1877), during which significant efforts were made to establish civil rights for African Americans following the abolition of slavery. As Reconstruction ended, Southern states began enacting laws to establish a system of racial segregation and disenfranchisement.
A civil rights organization in the United States. It was founded on February 12, 1909, in response to widespread racial violence and discrimination against African Americans, particularly the 1908 race riot in Springfield, Illinois.
The NAACP's mission is to secure the political, educational, social, and economic equality of rights for all people and to eliminate race-based discrimination. The organization has been instrumental in advocating for civil rights and working towards the elimination of segregation and other forms of racial injustice.
The NAACP uses a variety of strategies to achieve its goals, including legal action, advocacy, lobbying, and public education. Throughout its history, the NAACP has played a crucial role in landmark civil rights cases, such as Brown v. Board of Education, which led to the desegregation of public schools, and it has been involved in numerous other efforts to combat discrimination and promote equal rights for all citizens. The organization continues to be active in addressing contemporary civil rights issues.
A landmark 1896 Supreme Court case that upheld racial segregation laws for public facilities under the “separate but equal” doctrine, later overturned by Brown v. Board of Education.
A social construct used to categorize and classify human populations based on physical characteristics such as skin color, hair texture, and facial features. The concept of race has been historically used to distinguish and group people into distinct categories, often with the assumption of inherent biological or genetic differences between racial groups.
It is important to understand that race is a social construct and not a biological or scientific category. While there are variations in physical traits among human populations, genetic variation does not align neatly with traditional racial classifications. In fact, genetic differences between individuals within a racial group are often greater than differences between racial groups.
The understanding of race and racial categories varies across different cultures and societies, and classifications have changed over time. Racial categories can also be influenced by cultural, historical, and political factors.
Due to its social nature, race has been used as a basis for discrimination, inequality, and prejudice throughout history. However, it is crucial to recognize that race should not be used to determine intelligence, character, or other inherent qualities of individuals or groups. Acknowledging the social construct of race is essential in promoting a more inclusive and equitable society that respects the diversity of human populations and values the dignity and rights of all individuals, regardless of their racial background.
A perspective suggesting that an increase in a minority population can be perceived as a threat by the majority group, leading to stricter social controls and legal measures to maintain dominance.
A law enforcement practice in which individuals are targeted or treated differently by law enforcement solely based on their race, ethnicity, national origin, or perceived racial characteristics. It involves the use of race or ethnicity as a factor in making decisions about whom to stop, question, search, or investigate, without any specific evidence of criminal activity or wrongdoing.
Refers to the enforced separation of different racial, ethnic, religious, or social groups in a community, organization, or society. This separation can occur in various aspects of life, such as housing, education, employment, and public facilities. Historically, segregation has been most prominently associated with racial segregation, particularly in the United States during the era of Jim Crow laws, where laws and policies enforced the separation of African Americans from white Americans in various public spaces.
Segregation can take different forms, including de jure segregation, which is segregation imposed by law, and de facto segregation, which occurs without explicit legal mandates but as a result of social and economic factors. Efforts to combat segregation and promote integration have been central to various civil rights movements around the world. The goal is to create more inclusive and equitable societies where individuals from different backgrounds have equal access to opportunities and resources.
A landmark legal case in the United States that exposed racial injustice and highlighted the deep racial prejudices and flaws in the American justice system during the 1930s. The case involved the wrongful arrest, trial, and conviction of nine African American teenagers on false charges of raping two white women.
A criminological theory that focuses on the influence of neighborhood characteristics and social factors on crime and deviance. Developed by sociologists at the University of Chicago, particularly Clifford Shaw and Henry McKay, in the early 20th century, this theory examines how certain neighborhood attributes can contribute to higher rates of crime and a breakdown in social control.
Also known as evolutionary psychology or sociobiology, are theoretical frameworks that seek to explain human behavior and social phenomena by integrating evolutionary biology and genetics with social and cultural factors. These theories propose that certain behavioral and social traits in humans have evolved through natural selection, as they provided survival and reproductive advantages to our ancestors.
A sociological concept that proposes the existence of certain subcultures or social groups within a society that promote and accept violence as a means of resolving conflicts and gaining social status. This theory was first introduced by Marvin Wolfgang and Franco Ferracuti in the 1960s as an attempt to explain the high rates of violent crime in urban areas.