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Security Without Equity? The Effect of Secure Communities on Racial Profiling by Police
Abstract
Anecdotal and circumstantial evidence suggest that the implementation of Secure Communities,
a federal program that allows police officers to more easily identify illegal immigrants,
has increased racial bias by police. The goal of this analysis is to empirically evaluate
the effect of Secure Communities on racial bias by police using motor vehicle stop
and search data from the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation. This objective
differs from most previous research, which has largely attempted to quantify racial
profiling for a moment in time rather than looking at how an event influences racial
profiling. I examine the effects of Secure Communities on police treatment of Hispanics
vs. whites with an expanded difference-in-difference approach that looks at outcomes
in motor vehicle search success rate, search rate conditional on a police stop, stop
rate, and police action conditional on stop. Statistical analyses yield no evidence
that the ratification of Secure Communities increased racial profiling against Hispanics
by police. This finding is at odds with the anecdotal and circumstantial evidence
that has led many to believe that the ratification of Secure Communities led to a
widespread increase in racial profiling by police, a discrepancy that should caution
policy makers about making decisions driven by stories and summary statistics.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
EconomicsPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9582Citation
Willoughby, Jack (2015). Security Without Equity? The Effect of Secure Communities on Racial Profiling by Police.
Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9582.Collections
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