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IMAGES OF DANGER AND CULPABILITY: RACIAL STEREOTYPING, CASE PROCESSING, AND CRIMINAL SENTENCING*
200
Citations
35
References
2005
Year
Critical Race TheoryCriminal Justice ReformSystemic JusticeHarsher TreatmentDiscriminationLawCriminal LawRacial DisparitiesSocial SciencesRaceCriminal Justice SystemCase ProcessingRacial StereotypingAfrican American StudiesMass Incarceration StudiesCorrectional PracticePenologyWashington StateRacial JusticeDangerous Drug OffenderOffender ClassificationCriminal JusticeSociologyJusticeCriminal Behavior
In this paper we argue that the meaning of race in criminal justice decision making will vary depending on other offender and offense characteristics, and that differences in treatment within races may therefore be as large as differences between races. We find that, among adult drug offenders from Washington State, those white offenders who most closely resemble the stereotype of a dangerous drug offender receive significantly harsher treatment than other white offending groups, while among black offenders, it is the defendants who least resemble a dangerous drug offender who receive substantially different—in this case, less punitive—treatment than other black offenders. That is, the exceptions are made for the most serious and the least serious offenders. We discuss the implications of these findings.
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