Making Drug use Dangerous for Black Men: Race, Drugs, Violence, and Criminal Justice

IF 2.1 3区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Patrick Seffrin, Joseph Teeple
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Differential treatment under the law has historically been the case for African Americans. The current study theorized that the War on Drugs, which was waged disproportionately in majority Black communities, had the unintended effect of making drug use riskier for Black men by limiting the supply of drugs to high-risk populations who commit far more serious and violent criminal offenses. A subsample of the Add Health data containing Black and White male survey participants were compared with respect to drug use, violence, and criminal justice involvement. Drug use was found to be less prevalent, overall, for Black men but its association with violence was greater for Black men than White men. Differential legal treatment for violence and drugs was found to be greater for Black men than White men and had diminishing returns for deterring violence and negative returns for drugs by predicting greater use. Accounting for differential legal treatment did not significantly reduce predicted racial disparities in violence or drug use. Implications of these findings are discussed.
让吸毒对黑人构成危险:种族、毒品、暴力和刑事司法
法律规定的差别待遇历来适用于非裔美国人。目前的研究认为,在大多数黑人社区中进行的禁毒战争产生了意想不到的影响,通过限制向犯下更严重暴力犯罪的高危人群供应毒品,使黑人男性的吸毒风险更高。将包含黑人和白人男性调查参与者的Add Health数据的子样本与吸毒、暴力和刑事司法参与进行了比较。总体而言,黑人男性吸毒不太普遍,但黑人男性吸毒与暴力的关系比白人男性更大。研究发现,黑人男性对暴力和毒品的区别法律待遇比白人男性更大,而且通过预测更多的使用,阻止暴力的回报递减,而毒品的回报为负。考虑到不同的法律待遇并没有显著减少预测的暴力或吸毒方面的种族差异。讨论了这些发现的含义。
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来源期刊
Race and Justice
Race and Justice Multiple-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
19.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Race and Justice: An International Journal serves as a quarterly forum for the best scholarship on race, ethnicity, and justice. Of particular interest to the journal are policy-oriented papers that examine how race/ethnicity intersects with justice system outcomes across the globe. The journal is also open to research that aims to test or expand theoretical perspectives exploring the intersection of race/ethnicity, class, gender, and justice. The journal is open to scholarship from all disciplinary origins and methodological approaches (qualitative and/or quantitative).Topics of interest to Race and Justice include, but are not limited to, research that focuses on: Legislative enactments, Policing Race and Justice, Courts, Sentencing, Corrections (community-based, institutional, reentry concerns), Juvenile Justice, Drugs, Death penalty, Public opinion research, Hate crime, Colonialism, Victimology, Indigenous justice systems.
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