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Attitudes about electronic monitoring: Minority and majority racial group differences
Authors:Brian K. Payne  Matthew DeMichele
Affiliation:a Department of Criminal Justice, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302, United States
b Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky, Council of State Governments/American Probation and Parole Association, Lexington, KY 40578, United States
c Sociology-Criminal Justice Graduate Program, Norfolk State University, 700 Park Avenue, Norfolk, VA 23504, United States
Abstract:Past public opinion research routinely uncovered significant variation in attitudes toward justice system policies among different racial groups. The bulk of punishment attitudinal research, for the most part, focused on more severe sanctions, namely, incarceration and the death penalty. More recent research investigated the perspectives and experiences associated with intermediate sanctions. There are few intermediate sanctions receiving more attention than the use of electronic monitoring, especially with sex offenders. In this article, it is demonstrated that non-White college students have significantly different attitudes about the punitiveness and inequality of electronic monitoring. These findings were uncovered through 599 completed surveys from two universities, and using factor analysis and least-squares regression analysis. Theoretical and practical implications for continued use of this sanction are discussed.
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