街头停车与破窗:特里,纽约的种族与混乱

J. Fagan, Garth Davies
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引用次数: 460

摘要

纽约市各社区警察“拦截搜身”活动的模式反映了激进警务的竞争理论。“破窗”理论认为,身体和社会紊乱更集中的社区应该有更多的拦截和搜身活动,特别是对“生活质量”犯罪。然而,虽然混乱理论为生活质量的警务策略提供了信息,但观察到的拦截和搜身活动模式表明,社区特征,如种族构成、贫困水平和社会混乱程度,比“破窗”的存在更能预测种族和犯罪特定的警察拦截。此外,对少数民族公民的拦截往往不能达到特里的合理怀疑标准,这表明种族与“维持秩序的警务”的战略设计相结合。我们的经验证据表明,治安不是针对治安混乱的地方,也不是为了提高生活质量,而是针对贫困地区的穷人。这一策略与破窗理论的政策原理相矛盾,偏离了最初对社区条件的重视,转而不成比例地关注少数民族公民。种族歧视的警务强化了少数族裔社区的公民的看法,即他们受到非特定的怀疑,因此成为激进的拦截搜身警务的目标。如此广泛的目标引发了人们对法律合法性的担忧,有可能削弱公民对共同安全生产的参与,并削弱当代警务更广泛的社会规范目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Street Stops and Broken Windows: Terry, Race and Disorder in New York City
Patterns of "stop and frisk" activity by police across New York City neighborhoods reflect competing theories of aggressive policing. "Broken Windows" theory suggests that neighborhoods with greater concentrations of physical and social disorder should evidence higher stop and frisk activity, especially for "quality of life" crimes. However, while disorder theory informs quality of life policing strategies, observed patterns of stop and frisk activity suggest that neighborhood characteristics such as racial composition, poverty levels and the extent of social disorganization are stronger predictors of race- and crime-specific police stops than is the presence of "broken windows." Furthermore, stops of minority citizens more often failed to meet Terry standards of reasonable suspicion, suggesting the conflation of race with the strategic design of "order maintenance policing." Our empirical evidence suggests that policing is not about disorderly places, nor about improving the quality of life, but about policing poor people in poor places. This strategy contradicts the policy rationale derived from Broken Windows theory, and deviates from its original emphasis on community conditions by instead focusing disproportionately on minority citizens. Racially disparate policing reinforces perceptions by citizens in minority neighborhoods that they are under non-particularized suspicion and are therefore targeted for aggressive stop and frisk policing. Such broad targeting raises concerns about the legitimacy of law, threatens to weaken citizen participation in the co-production of security, and undercuts the broader social norms goals of contemporary policing.
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