New data on highway stops and searches from across the country have spawned renewed debate over racial profiling on the roads. The new data reveal consistently disproportionate searches of minority motorists, but, very often, an equal or lower general success rate – or hit rate – associated with those searches. Economists are developing new models of racial profiling to test whether the data are consistent with policing efficiency or racial prejudice, and argue that equal hit rates reflect that the police are maximizing the success rate of their searches. Civil liberties advocates are scrutinizing the same data and, in most cases, reaching opposite conclusions. They argue that equal hit rates merely reflect similar offending patterns by r...
Racial profiling, including its use as a subset of behavior profiling, as an investigative tool is d...
Knowles, Persico, and Todd (2001) develop a model of police search and offender behavior. Their mode...
In this Article, I explore why measuring disparate-treatment discrimination by police is so difficul...
New data on highway stops and searches from across the country have spawned renewed debate over raci...
New data on highway stops and searches from across the country have spawned renewed debate over raci...
Economists and other interested academics have committed significant time and effort to developing a...
The purpose of this research is to examine whether law enforcement officers are racially profiling m...
Economists and other interested academics have committed significant time and effort to developing a...
This Note summarizes and synthesizes developments in statistical analyses of racial profiling data a...
Racial profiling, in the context of the current study, concerns the association of racial and/or eth...
Imagine that you are a police officer stopping cars for a drug search and that you have reliable sta...
Remedying an elusive practice such as racial profiling remains a challenging issue for the judiciary...
This Article investigates the costs and benefits of racial profiling in the context of drug interdic...
The author proposes that in an ongoing debate on questions concerning the possibility of racial or o...
Racial profiling violates the United States Constitution’s premise that all people are equal under t...
Racial profiling, including its use as a subset of behavior profiling, as an investigative tool is d...
Knowles, Persico, and Todd (2001) develop a model of police search and offender behavior. Their mode...
In this Article, I explore why measuring disparate-treatment discrimination by police is so difficul...
New data on highway stops and searches from across the country have spawned renewed debate over raci...
New data on highway stops and searches from across the country have spawned renewed debate over raci...
Economists and other interested academics have committed significant time and effort to developing a...
The purpose of this research is to examine whether law enforcement officers are racially profiling m...
Economists and other interested academics have committed significant time and effort to developing a...
This Note summarizes and synthesizes developments in statistical analyses of racial profiling data a...
Racial profiling, in the context of the current study, concerns the association of racial and/or eth...
Imagine that you are a police officer stopping cars for a drug search and that you have reliable sta...
Remedying an elusive practice such as racial profiling remains a challenging issue for the judiciary...
This Article investigates the costs and benefits of racial profiling in the context of drug interdic...
The author proposes that in an ongoing debate on questions concerning the possibility of racial or o...
Racial profiling violates the United States Constitution’s premise that all people are equal under t...
Racial profiling, including its use as a subset of behavior profiling, as an investigative tool is d...
Knowles, Persico, and Todd (2001) develop a model of police search and offender behavior. Their mode...
In this Article, I explore why measuring disparate-treatment discrimination by police is so difficul...