Race, ethnicity, and structural variations in youth risk of arrest: Evidence from a national longitudinal sample

TS Andersen - Criminal justice and behavior, 2015 - journals.sagepub.com
Criminal justice and behavior, 2015journals.sagepub.com
Missing from the considerable body of literature on disproportionate minority contact is an
examination of the factors that influence risk of juvenile arrest. Using the National
Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, the author examines racial/ethnic disparities in youth
arrest, net of self-reported delinquency. Drawing from research using a minority threat
perspective, this study examines whether disparities are exacerbated by macro levels of the
relative size of the minority population and minority economic inequality. The results indicate …
Missing from the considerable body of literature on disproportionate minority contact is an examination of the factors that influence risk of juvenile arrest. Using the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, the author examines racial/ethnic disparities in youth arrest, net of self-reported delinquency. Drawing from research using a minority threat perspective, this study examines whether disparities are exacerbated by macro levels of the relative size of the minority population and minority economic inequality. The results indicate Black youth have a higher risk of arrest than White youth in all contextual climates, but this disparity is magnified in predominantly non-Black communities. Differences between Hispanic and White youths’ risk of arrest did not reach statistical significance or vary across communities. The findings failed to yield support for the threat perspective but strongly supported the benign neglect thesis. Implications for theory and future research are discussed.
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