Race, Drugs, And Policing: Understanding Disparities In Drug Delivery Arrests

Date: 07 February 2006

Abstract

This article draws on several unique data sources to assess and explain racial disparity in Seattle's drug delivery arrests. Evidence regarding the racial and ethnic composition of those who deliver any of five serious drugs in that city is compared with the racial and ethnic composition of those arrested for this offense. Our findings indicate that blacks are significantly overrepresented among Seattle's drug delivery arrestees. Several organizational practices explain racial disparity in these arrests: law enforcement's focus on crack offenders, the priority placed on outdoor drug venues, and the geographic concentration of police resources in racially heterogeneous areas. The available evidence further indicates that these practices are not determined by race-neutral factors such as crime rates or community complaints. Our findings thus indicate that race shapes perceptions of who and what constitutes Seattle's drug problem, as well as the organizational response to that problem.

Citation

Beckett, Katherine, Kris Nyrop, and Lori Pfingst, ‘Race, Drugs, and Policing: Understanding Disparities in Drug Delivery Arrests’ (2006) 44 Criminology, 105.

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