The Hill -Increasing
diversity among officers may not be enough alone to lead to lessening
racial disparity in police shootings, according to a new study.
The study published
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
of America found no evidence that white officers are more likely to
shoot minority civilians than non-white officers.
The
study used a database of more than 900 fatal officer-involved shootings
based on information from The Guardian and The Washington Post.
Researchers analyzed different factors to try to predict the race of the person shot, The Guardian reports.
Researchers
found that in counties where minorities were responsible for higher
rates of violent crime, a person fatally shot was 3.7 times more likely
to be black 3.3 time more likely to be Hispanic than white, the outlet
reported.
But researchers found no evidence that white officers were more likely to shoot minority groups than officers of color.
The
report does say diversifying police forces could have other benefits,
such as building trust, but claims it wouldn't "meaningfully reduce"
racial disparities in fatal shootings,
1 comment:
Tom Puckett
said...
Just like diversity in congress doesn't necessarily lead to better legislation (for the majority of the people).
Beauty's only skin deep and the persons attitudes which translate into actions and policies is what really matter!
1 comment:
Just like diversity in congress doesn't necessarily lead to better legislation (for the majority of the people).
Beauty's only skin deep and the persons attitudes which translate into actions and policies is what really matter!
Cheer, Tom
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