Racial biases in law enforcement over the past three decades have been linked to the racialized policies of the war on drugs. The author examines the educational consequences of the war on drugs on the lives of youth by analyzing racial differences in the impact of a juvenile drug arrest on high school dropout. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health, the author finds that juvenile drug arrests are more consequential for Black and darker phenotype Latinx youth, who are less likely to be involved in delinquent and criminal behaviors than white youth with drug arrests. The author suggests that racial disparities in drug enforcement may be creating a racialized selection bias among drug arrestees, leading...
The War on Drugs has had a devastating effect on African American communities nationwide. The concep...
Racial Discrimination and the War on Drugs: The Effects of Systematic Racism in the US Racial discri...
Racial disparities in arrests and incarceration are well documented and typically considered the res...
Racial biases in law enforcement over the last three decades are linked to the racialized policies o...
Illegal drug use in the U.S. does not differ significantly by race (SAMHSA 2014). Data from the U.S....
For over half a century, the “War on Drugs” has entailed strict control and policing of illicit drug...
The current research study examines the relationship between race, ethnicity, and offense type on th...
Contact with the justice system can lead to a range of poor health and social outcomes. While person...
Background: Race has a significant impact on the way that justice systems treat offenders. From laws...
The differences in treatment between Black and white Americans in the past fifty years has been a to...
A great deal of research concludes that drug use is relatively similar across races for adults, and ...
Racial disparities in US drug arrest rates have been observed for decades, but their causes and poli...
Examines the decrease in African Americans and increase in whites among those in state prisons for d...
The “war on drugs,” beginning in the 1980s, represented a profound shift in the way in which the Uni...
BACKGROUND: Although Blacks and Whites in the United States use drugs at similar rates, Blacks are m...
The War on Drugs has had a devastating effect on African American communities nationwide. The concep...
Racial Discrimination and the War on Drugs: The Effects of Systematic Racism in the US Racial discri...
Racial disparities in arrests and incarceration are well documented and typically considered the res...
Racial biases in law enforcement over the last three decades are linked to the racialized policies o...
Illegal drug use in the U.S. does not differ significantly by race (SAMHSA 2014). Data from the U.S....
For over half a century, the “War on Drugs” has entailed strict control and policing of illicit drug...
The current research study examines the relationship between race, ethnicity, and offense type on th...
Contact with the justice system can lead to a range of poor health and social outcomes. While person...
Background: Race has a significant impact on the way that justice systems treat offenders. From laws...
The differences in treatment between Black and white Americans in the past fifty years has been a to...
A great deal of research concludes that drug use is relatively similar across races for adults, and ...
Racial disparities in US drug arrest rates have been observed for decades, but their causes and poli...
Examines the decrease in African Americans and increase in whites among those in state prisons for d...
The “war on drugs,” beginning in the 1980s, represented a profound shift in the way in which the Uni...
BACKGROUND: Although Blacks and Whites in the United States use drugs at similar rates, Blacks are m...
The War on Drugs has had a devastating effect on African American communities nationwide. The concep...
Racial Discrimination and the War on Drugs: The Effects of Systematic Racism in the US Racial discri...
Racial disparities in arrests and incarceration are well documented and typically considered the res...