Blind Justice? The Impact of Race on the Juvenile Justice Process
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Crime & Delinquency
- Vol. 33 (2) , 224-258
- https://doi.org/10.1177/001112878703300203
Abstract
The increasing prevalence of minority youth in the juvenile justice system has renewed concerns over racial disparities in juvenile justice processing. Previous research has yielded ambiguous results, with findings complicated by methodological shortcomings, divergent research strategies, and design artifacts. To resolve questions on the extent and source of racial disparities in juvenile justice processing, research is needed on the nature, location, and magnitude of discrimination in the juvenile justice system. This study examines racial disparities in decision making at six points in the juvenile justice process, from apprehension through judicial commitment decisions. Samples of Anglo and minority youth were drawn at each point, controlling for offense severity, other offense characteristics, and extralegal factors in addition to race. The results show racial disparities at each point, with minorities consistently receiving harsher dispositions. Disparities took different forms at various stages of the process, usually for nonserious offenses. Race was a direct, indirect, and interactive influence at various decision points. Disparities were observed at other times only when controlling for other extralegal factors such as family status. The results suggest that the juvenile justice system reflects social and economic disparities endemic in other social domains. The correlates of delinquency in minority and predominantly Anglo populations are similar. Accordingly, base rate differences may be less important than societal reaction in explaining the overrepresentation of minorities in the juvenile justice process. The narrowing of social gaps may also reduce disparate perceptions of minorities in the juvenile justice system, and restore their population balance in delinquent populations.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Neighborhood Context of Police BehaviorCrime and Justice, 1986
- Crime in Cities: The Effects of Formal and Informal Social ControlCrime and Justice, 1986
- Inequality, Opportunity, and Crime Rates in Central CitiesCriminology, 1983
- Legal Versus Extra–Legal Determinants of Juvenile Court DispositionsJuvenile and Family Court Journal, 1981
- Preadjudicatory detention in a large metropolitan juvenile court.Law and Human Behavior, 1981
- Theoretical Interpretations of Social Class and Racial Differentials in Legal Decision-Making for JuvenilesThe Sociological Quarterly, 1979
- Prior Offense Record as a Self-Fulfilling ProphecyLaw & Society Review, 1978
- The Effect of Social Characteristics on Juvenile Court DispositionsThe Sociological Quarterly, 1977
- Race, Socioeconomic Status and Sentencing in the Juvenile Justice SystemThe Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-), 1973
- Race and Ethnicity Relative to Other Factors in Juvenile Court DispositionsAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1971