NCJ Number
              148465
          Journal
  Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency Volume: 31 Issue: 2 Dated: (May 1994) Pages: 135-148
Date Published
  1994
Length
              14 pages
          Annotation
              This article highlights observational and interview data concerning police encounters with minority youths in a western State and demonstrates how qualitative data can be used to increase the understanding of the disproportionate representation of minorities in the juvenile justice system.
          Abstract
              The study reported here combined quantitative and qualitative methodologies to examine factors contributing to racial and ethnic disproportionality. The data showed that black youth were severely overrepresented at every stage of the criminal justice process. The article describes qualitative data concerning police-juvenile encounters and suggests ways in which the data can be used to understand the social processes that contribute to disproportionality. The authors note that the arrest stage is the level at which the selection bias that shapes statistical outcomes occurs.  Qualitative data should be used to examine issues that cannot be answered statistically, such as the influence of the media on racial disproportionality. 6 notes and 42 references