NCJ Number
245020
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 59 Issue: 1 Dated: February 2013 Pages: 32-58
Date Published
February 2013
Length
27 pages
Annotation
This study explored what factors explain the adoption of protocols addressing the racial profiling phenomenon.
Abstract
The issue of racial profiling has come to represent one of the key contemporary challenges facing law enforcement agencies in the United States. One way that agencies have responded to this issue is to adopt anti-profiling policies to address concerns about racial disparities in traffic stops and their outcomes. Policy adoption is assumed to encourage more racially equitable policing as well as enhance community relations. While both of these outcomes appear beneficial to law enforcement agencies, there is also good reason to expect that agencies may differ in the extent to which they are likely to implement such policy. This study explores what factors explain the adoption of protocols addressing the racial profiling phenomenon. Using data on large law enforcement agencies from the 2003 LEMAS survey, the findings reveal that both agency organizational characteristics and environmental features of the jurisdiction are associated with the agency's profiling policy regime. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage Journals.