Racial Bias in Mock Juror Decision-Making: A Meta-Analytic Review of Defendant Treatment |
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Authors: | Tara?L.?MitchellEmail author Ryann?M.?Haw Jeffrey?E.?Pfeifer Christian?A.?Meissner |
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Affiliation: | (1) Lock Haven University, United State;(2) Big Bend Community College, USA;(3) University of Regina, Canada;(4) University of Texas of El Paso, NW;(5) Department of Psychology, Lock Haven University, Lock Haven, PA, 17745 |
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Abstract: | Common wisdom seems to suggest that racial bias, defined as disparate treatment of minority defendants, exists in jury decision-making,
with Black defendants being treated more harshly by jurors than White defendants. The empirical research, however, is inconsistent—some
studies show racial bias while others do not. Two previous meta-analyses have found conflicting results regarding the existence
of racial bias in juror decision-making (Mazzella & Feingold, 1994, Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 24, 1315–1344; Sweeney & Haney, 1992, Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 10, 179–195). This research takes a meta-analytic approach to further investigate the inconsistencies within the empirical literature
on racial bias in juror decision-making by defining racial bias as disparate treatment of racial out-groups (rather than focusing
upon the minority group alone). Our results suggest that a small, yet significant, effect of racial bias in decision-making
is present across studies, but that the effect becomes more pronounced when certain moderators are considered. The state of
the research will be discussed in light of these findings. |
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Keywords: | racial bias juror decision-making meta-analysis |
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