Browsing by Subject "Law enforcement"
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Item Open Access Essays on Criminal Justice and Inequality(2022) Jabri, RanaeThis dissertation encompasses three essays on policing and criminal justice, algorithms and inequality. The first two essays examine the efficacy and equity implications of data-driven algorithms that are increasingly used in important life-altering decision-making contexts. The third essay investigates when crime responds to punishment.
The first essay studies the impacts of neighborhood targeting of police presence brought about by predictive policing algorithms on crime and arrests. While predictive policing is widely used, the impacts of neighborhood targeting brought about by predictive policing on crime, and whether there are disproportionate racial impacts are open questions. Using a novel dataset, I isolate quasi-experimental variation in police presence induced by predictive-policing algorithms to estimate the causal impacts of algorithm-induced police presence. I find that algorithm-induced police presence decreases serious violent and property crime, and evidence that algorithm-induced neighborhood targeting of police presence has disproportionate racial impacts on traffic incident arrests and serious violent crime incident arrests.
The second essay investigates how data-driven algorithms can maximize overall predictive power at the cost of racial and economic justice. Examining a tool that is already widely used in pretrial decision-making, I build a framework to evaluate how input variables trades off overall predictive power, and racial and economic disparities in the scores that defendants receive. I find that using information on neighborhoods where defendants live only marginally contributes to overall predictive power. However, the use of defendant neighborhood data substantially increases racial and economic disparities, suggesting that machine learning objectives tuned to maximize overall predictive power risk being in conflict with racial and economic justice.
Finally, in the third essay, joint with Sarah Komisarow and Robert Gonzalez, we examine when crime responds to punishment severity increases. While economic theory suggests that crime should respond to punishment severity, empirical evidence on this link is ambiguous. We propose an explanation for this empirical evidence -- the effect of punishment severity increases depends on the probability of detection; punishments deter crime when the probability of detection is moderate. We test and validate this explanation using increases in punishment severity in drug-free school zones along with changes in the probability of detection resulting from a community crime-monitoring program.
Item Open Access Law Enforcement and Clinician Partnerships: Training of Trainers for CIT Teams in Liberia, West Africa.(Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.), 2019-06-12) Boazak, Mina; Kohrt, Brandon A; Gwaikolo, Wilfred; Yoss, Sarah; Sonkarlay, Sehwah; Strode, Pat; Compton, Michael T; Cooper, JaniceThe crisis intervention team (CIT) model was developed in the United States to align law enforcement goals with those of mental health advocates and service users. Liberia is the first low-income country where CIT has been implemented. After preliminary training of law enforcement officers and mental health clinicians by U.S. CIT experts, the program is now entirely implemented by Liberian personnel. In this column, the authors describe topics addressed in the 5-day training-of-trainers process to prepare Liberian mental health clinicians and law enforcement officers to conduct the program, along with feedback received from participants. They hope that this model can guide future initiatives aimed at fostering collaboration of law enforcement and mental health services in global mental health.Item Open Access Protecting and Serving: What Actually Matters to Young, Black Men in Durham, North Carolina(2021) Clemmons, Ajenai ShareeceYoung Black men in neighborhoods with high levels of poverty and intensive policing have a greater risk of violent death—both at the hands of civilians and police—than any other demographic group in the United States. Yet, there is a dearth of academic research that examines safety and what constitutes legitimate policing from this demographic’s perspective. In this dissertation, I conduct two-hour qualitative interviews of 21 young Black men living in Durham, NC to examine how they assess police and their desired police reforms. Chapters focus on participants’ (1) criteria for judging how well police are doing; (2) ideal attributes of officers well-suited to carry out their vision of policing; and (3) standards for building and maintain trust. I find that participants are principally concerned with the unpredictable nature of policing. Their reforms center on forging a police force that is predictable and reliable, and whose actions reflect a government contract they are owed as American citizens and, more importantly, human beings. Findings enrich our theoretical understanding of what this population believes would need to change to ensure their communities are and feel safe. Each substantive chapter concludes with policy recommendations for police departments and municipal leaders.