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17 J. Ethnicity Crim. Just. 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/wecj17 and id is 1 raw text is: 


JOURNAL OF ETHNICITY IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE
2019, VOL. 17, NO. 1, 1-15                                       Routledge
https://doi.org/10.1080/15377938.2018.1512918                    Taylor&Francis Group



Perceptions of the criminal justice system by minority
and   majority group university students: The role of
ethnic identity

Cynthia Willis Esqueda, Madeline J. Schlosser, Rosa Hazel Delgado, and David
Orozco  Garcia
Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA


   ABSTRACT                                                ARTICLE HISTORY
   Minorities are overrepresented in the criminal justice system,  Received 19 July 2017
   and prior research has indicated ethnic minorities and Whites  Revised 11 August 2018
   have different opinions of and different experiences within  Accepted 14 August 2018
   the system. While differences have been shown, the influence
   of ethnic identity on perceptions of the legal systern has been  Ey or s
   overlooked. The purpose of the present research was to deter-  police-community relations
   mine if there were differences in perceptions of the legal sys-
   tem by ethnic identity levels for ethnic minorities and Whites.
   Results indicated differences do exist and ethnic identity is a
   crucial issue in understanding resonance with the legal sys-
   tem. Future directions for incorporating ethnic identity in
   research on the criminal justice systemR are discussed.



Minorities,  particularly males, are  overrepresented  in the  criminal  justice
system,  and this disparity has  been noted  since  the 1800s  (see Roettger &
Swisher,  2011). Black  and  Hispanic  males  have  a much   higher  chance  of
going  to prison  than  White   males  (Bonczar  &   Beck, 1997;  Branscombe,
Schmitt,  &   Harvey,   1999), for  both   state and  federal  prison  systems
(Chakawa,   Butler, &  Shapiro, 2015;  Nellis, 2016). The reasons  for the dis-
parity can originate from  several sources  (i.e., biased decision-making, inci-
dence  of  crime  commission,   policy), but stereotypes  about  who  commits
crime  exist. Stereotypes  about  criminality  and  minority's  propensity  for
crime  commission (especially by males) are of long standing (Espinoza,
Willis-Esqueda,  Toscano,  &  Coons,  2015; Spencer,  Charbonneau,   &  Glaser,
2016;  Willis-Esqueda   &   Swanson,   1997;  Wollard,   Harvell,  &  Graham,
2008). These  criminality stereotypes  are not only expressed  by  citizens, but
also by members   of law  enforcement  and  are believed to stem from  implicit
racial biases (Taylor, Turner, Esbensen,  & Winfree,  2001), as well as explicit
negative  attitudes (Christopher   Commission, 1991), about minorities by
police officers.

CONTACT Cynthia Willis Esqueda 0 cwillis-esquedal@unl.edu ( Department of Psychology, University of
Nebraska-Lincoln, 336 Burnett Hall, Lincoln, NE, USA 68588-0308.
CO 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

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