Disability’s Dark Figure of Violence: Reporting Variations Across Intersections of Disability Type, Race, Ethnicity, and Sex

IF 2.1 3区 心理学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Isabella E. Castillo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Using data from the 2017 to 2020 National Crime Victimization Survey, the current study examines how race, ethnicity, and sex affect the likelihood of reporting violent victimization to the police across types of disability (hearing, vision, cognitive, and physical). Findings reveal that Black individuals with cognitive disabilities and Hispanic individuals with multiple disabilities were less likely to report their violent victimization to the police compared to White individuals with no disabilities. Results not only support prior literature’s conclusion that disability type shapes reporting outcomes but indicate potentially cumulative effects for those at the intersections. Its implications highlight the critical need for criminal justice practitioners, victim advocates, and researchers to integrate disability and its heterogeneity into practice.
残疾的黑暗暴力形象:不同残疾类型、种族、民族和性别交叉点的报告差异
本研究利用 2017 年至 2020 年全国犯罪受害情况调查的数据,研究了种族、民族和性别如何影响不同残疾类型(听力、视力、认知和肢体)的人向警方报告暴力受害情况的可能性。研究结果表明,与无残疾的白人相比,有认知障碍的黑人和有多种残疾的西班牙裔人向警方报告其遭受暴力侵害的可能性较低。研究结果不仅支持了之前文献中关于残疾类型会影响报案结果的结论,而且还表明,对于那些处于交叉路口的人来说,可能会产生累积效应。其影响凸显了刑事司法从业人员、受害者权益倡导者和研究人员将残疾及其异质性纳入实践的迫切需要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Criminal Justice and Behavior publishes articles examining psychological and behavioral aspects of the juvenile and criminal justice systems. The concepts "criminal justice" and "behavior" should be interpreted broadly to include analyses of etiology of delinquent or criminal behavior, the process of law violation, victimology, offender classification and treatment, deterrence, and incapacitation.
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