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Driving across campus: Assessing the impact of drivers' race and gender on police traffic enforcement actions
Authors:Byongook Moon  Charles J. Corley
Affiliation:a Department of Justice, University of Alaska Fairbanks, P. O. Box 756425, Fairbanks, AK 99775-6425, United States
b School of Criminal Justice, Michigan Sate University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1118, United States
Abstract:This study examined the effect of drivers' race and gender on officers' decision to search a driver/vehicle and invoke a legal sanction, controlling for legal and extralegal factors. Logistic regression analyses of 10,210 traffic stops on a university campus indicated that drivers' race and gender had a significant effect on officers' decision to search a driver/vehicle and invoke a legal sanction. Black male drivers were more likely than White drivers to be searched, but were less likely to receive a legal sanction. Unexpectedly, the results showed that Asian drivers were less likely to be searched, but more likely to receive legal sanctions than White drivers. Findings, however, indicated that legal and extralegal factors (i.e., types of traffic violation, time, officer type) were found to have significant effects on officers' decisions during traffic stops.
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