The Rationality of Racial Profiling

Q2 Social Sciences
David Atenasio
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A number of philosophers argue that law enforcement officers may have good reasons to racially profile suspects under certain conditions. Their conclusions rest on a claim of epistemic rationality: if members of some races are at an increased risk of criminality, then it may be rational for law enforcement officers to subject them to increased scrutiny. In this paper I contest the epistemic rationality of racial profiling by appealing to recent work in criminology and the sociology of race and crime. I argue that recent studies indicate that race is a comparatively poor baseline for judging criminality. Law enforcement officers are therefore not making a cognitive error by ignoring race to focus on other correlates of crime but are keeping up with our best social science.
种族貌相的合理性
许多哲学家认为,在某些情况下,执法人员可能有充分的理由对嫌疑人进行种族定性。他们的结论基于认识理性的主张:如果某些种族的成员犯罪风险增加,那么执法人员对他们进行更多的审查可能是合理的。在本文中,我通过引用犯罪学和种族与犯罪社会学的最新工作,对种族貌相的认识合理性提出了质疑。我认为,最近的研究表明,种族是判断犯罪的一个相对较差的基线。因此,执法人员忽视种族来关注犯罪的其他相关因素并没有犯认知错误,而是在跟上我们最好的社会科学。
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来源期刊
Criminal Justice Ethics
Criminal Justice Ethics Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
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