Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editor Preface
- 1 Introduction: Policy Born Out of Racist Myth
- 2 Occam’s Razor: Racial/Ethnic Inequality Throughout Society
- 3 Law Enforcement Contact with Juveniles: Arrests and Citations
- 4 The Juvenile Justice System: Intake Decisions and Outcomes
- 5 Juvenile Self-Reports of Deviant and Criminal Behavior
- 6 Data Issues and the Case for Self-Report Data
- 7 Police, Juvenile Court and Juvenile Specialist Interviews
- 8 Conclusion and Discussion
- Appendix A Juvenile Self-Report Questionnaire
- Appendix B Interview Guide for Judges, Police Officers and Juvenile Specialists
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Introduction: Policy Born Out of Racist Myth
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editor Preface
- 1 Introduction: Policy Born Out of Racist Myth
- 2 Occam’s Razor: Racial/Ethnic Inequality Throughout Society
- 3 Law Enforcement Contact with Juveniles: Arrests and Citations
- 4 The Juvenile Justice System: Intake Decisions and Outcomes
- 5 Juvenile Self-Reports of Deviant and Criminal Behavior
- 6 Data Issues and the Case for Self-Report Data
- 7 Police, Juvenile Court and Juvenile Specialist Interviews
- 8 Conclusion and Discussion
- Appendix A Juvenile Self-Report Questionnaire
- Appendix B Interview Guide for Judges, Police Officers and Juvenile Specialists
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In effect, the juvenile justice labeling process works to single out adolescents from groups culturally alien to those in power. Those singled out, because of their powerlessness, are ill-equipped to stop the process or to intervene in it effectively to prevent themselves from having various and sundry tags imposed upon them by police, judges, probation officers, psychiatrists, and others who are employed as agents of the juvenile justice system.
John McCullough Martin (1970)Fifty years later, Martin's quote is still an eerily accurate description of the juvenile justice system in the United States. In Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Native American juveniles are two and a half times as likely as White youth to be arrested rather than cited, Black juveniles are more than twice as likely to be arrested as are White juveniles, and Latinx juveniles are almost twice as likely. Our data—from Oklahoma City—are consistent with national levels of overrepresentation by race and ethnicity in the juvenile justice system. This overrepresentation has been relatively consistent since it was first studied. In 1970, four years before the 1974 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, Black juveniles were 2.3 times as likely as White juveniles to be arrested nationally (Racial Disparities in Youth Commitments and Arrests, 2016). In almost 50 years, we have done little to lessen the impact of disproportionate minority contact (DMC).
This book examines how structural racism dramatically impacts the lives of non-White youth through their interactions with the juvenile justice system. Specifically, we aim to answer the question: To what extent is minority overrepresentation in the juvenile justice system due to differential involvement/behavior (i.e., non-White youth commit crimes at a higher rate) and to what extent is minority overrepresentation attributable to differential treatment (i.e., racism/racial bias within the system)? We hypothesize that non-White youth are over-policed, with the rationalization of over-policing resting upon juvenile justice officials incorrectly overgeneralizing the high rates of violent crime among a small number of non-White youth to include all or most non-White youth.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Disproportionate Minority Contact and Racism in the USHow We Failed Children of Color, pp. 1 - 33Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022