Objectives: Test hypotheses drawn from Smith and Alpert’s social conditioning theory that explains biased policing as the result of implicit racial stereotypes. Distinguishing between frisks, external pat-downs, and probable cause searches, we hypothesize that (1) black drivers are more likely than white drivers to be frisked and searched; (2) racial disparity is greater in frisks than searches; (3) racial disparity in frisks, but not searches, is conditional upon the racial composition of the community; and (4) that drivers’ race is not related to the productivity of searches. Methods: Data are all traffic stops made by the Rhode Island State Police in 2006, exclusive of those in which a search was mandatory. Multinomial and binary logistic regression is employed to estimate models of frisks, searches, search productivity and to test the conditional effect of community context. Results: Each of the four hypotheses is supported. Conclusion: Biased policing is largely the product of implicit stereotypes that are activated in contexts in which black drivers appear out of place and in police actions that require quick decisions providing little time to monitor cognitions. This insight has important implications for police training. Because of limitations in this study, additional research that distinguishes frisks and searches is needed.
Latest News
International conference POLICE STOPS ACROSS EUROPE (28 February 2023, The Hague, The Netherlands)
News
For more than four years, our EU COST funded network on Police Stops has been gathering information, hearing from experts…
Read moreWorkshop 'Registration of police stops and ethnicity and defining the police stop' 31 Aug - 2 Sept 2022
News
In line with our project’s ambition to share learning and explore the issue police stops across Europe, we are organising…
Read moreCfP European Journal of Policing Studies - Special Issue: The Dynamics of Police Stops
News
European Journal of Policing Studies Special Issue: The Dynamics of Police Stops Guest editors: Mike Rowe Sofie de Kimpe Vincenzo…
Read morePolstops Newsletter n4 (June 2022)
News
At last, we have been able to meet again. And we can now begin to identify what we have missed…
Read more