ScienceDaily (June 21, 2012) — Racial profiling has gained national attention in recent years, and a Kansas State University researcher is finding that it can involve an additional factor: gender.
Jeremy Briggs, doctoral candidate in sociology, Topeka, is analyzing police actions during routine traffic stops to understand how race and gender are connected. Perhaps one of his most significant findings is that black and Hispanic women are just as likely as white men to be ticketed, arrested or searched during a traffic stop.
“Racial profiling has really come back into political discussions, especially in national media,” Briggs said. “It still matters in traffic stops.”
For his research, Briggs is using a national set of data called the Police Public Contact Survey. The data set was collected in 2005 and includes information from citizens above the age of 16 about their most recent contact with police. The data set includes traffic stops, which are the most common form of police-level contact.
Briggs looked at reasons for a traffic stop, some of which included speeding, turning lane violations, traffic light or stop sign violations, drunk driving check lanes and other reasons. Speeding was the most common reason for a traffic stop. He also looked at outcomes of the traffic stop: if the driver received a warning, if the driver received a ticket, if the driver was arrested or if the driver was searched.
“In a real scenario, any of those outcomes are possible at the same time,” Briggs said. “A person could receive a ticket and be arrested. Or they could be searched but just receive a warning. There are a number of possibilities in any given stop.”
From 23 possible outcome variables in the data, Briggs constructed a dependent variable that consisted of four mutually exclusive traffic stop outcomes. He used multinomial statistical techniques to estimate the strongest predictors of each of these outcomes.
Some of his most significant findings include:
* When compared with men, women were 23 percent less likely to be ticketed, 55 percent less likely to be arrested and 76 percent less likely to be searched when stopped by police. Women were more likely to only receive a warning or have no outcome when stopped by police during a traffic stop.
* Black and Hispanic drivers were significantly more likely to be searched, ticketed and arrested than white drivers when stopped by police. For example, black drivers were more than twice as likely to be searched or arrested when compared with white drivers. Hispanic drivers were almost three times as likely to be searched when compared with white drivers.
By combining data dealing with race and gender, Briggs found the differences between men and women do not hold up for all races. Out of all racial and ethnic categories of male and female drivers, white women were most likely to receive a perceived benefit in a traffic stop, such as receiving only a warning or no outcome at all. But the same is not true for black and Hispanic women, who were just as likely as white men to be ticketed, arrested or searched instead of receiving a warning or no outcome.
Black and Hispanic men were the most likely to be ticketed, arrested or searched during a traffic stop. Black men were 2.5 times as likely as white men to be arrested and twice as likely to be searched. Hispanic men were 1.5 times as likely as white men to receive a ticket and more than three times as likely to be searched.
“We can’t make sense of racial differences without also considering sex and gender,” Briggs said. “We have to look at sex and gender at the same time as race and ethnicity because they’re connected in important ways. What I found in the case of traffic stops was that racial differences are deeply gendered as well. This connection should be a part of the larger racial profiling discussion.”
Briggs also studied the race of police officers during traffic stops. He found that officer race does not appear to have a significant effect on the outcome of the traffic stop. Rather, the outcome seemed to be most affected by driver’s characteristics.
“It is possible that racial and gender differences are explained by some of the controls, such as the reason for the stop, driving frequency and other demographics,” Briggs said. “But it’s also possible that when considering all these other controls, racial profiling still stands. My analysis shows that race and gender do still matter in traffic stops, even controlling for many of these other factors.”
Briggs plans future studies that will focus on different types of analysis with race and sex categories. His adviser is Dana Britton, professor of sociology. Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:
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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Kansas State University.
When I was with my medical agency, they sent me to WI on assignment. I’d work in Milwaukee, a heavy black and POOR area, but my housing was in Brookfield, a wealthy WHITE area. My car, that was assigned to me, had Chicago plates on it.
One night, after leaving the ER, I found out just how black I was….
A cop, followed me from Milwaukee to Brookfield, pulled me over on the side of a dirt road, yelled in my face, shined his flashlight on me and ordered me to get the fuck out the car.
He asked me:
1. Why I was here
2. Why do I have Chicago plates
3. Why does my license say PA but i’m in WI
4. Where do I work
5. The name of my agency
All the while one hand was on his gun. I thought, truly, that Jah would take me that night. I also realized that the SOB pulled me over in a deserted part of town so if the worst happened, no one would hear me scream.
After he was done interrogating me, I must have smelled my fear…because he smiled at me.
Blacks are not safe from these white thugs.
Remember that the KKK and the NRA came into power after slavery was abolished and JIM Crow laws were about to be passed.
I had thingz like that happen to me so much that i just take and keep on keep on and throw their whole game plan into dis-awry 4 the fact i dont play into the it so i can go on about my business
Yeah..I know what you mean. Now when I see a cop I immediately use my cell phone to call a family member and put it on speaker so they can listen in…just in case.
We have to just az smart and in some instancez smarter then them and do it on the sly..
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