4.3 Article

Disparities in Youth Arrest Across Racial and Ethnic Subgroups

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/15412040231186337

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arrest; race; ethnicity; implicit bias; group threat; FYSAS

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Extensive research shows that youth of color are more likely to be arrested compared to their White counterparts. This is partly due to law enforcement targeting areas with higher Black and Hispanic populations and having biased perceptions of danger and threat towards these suspects. However, previous studies have not considered the nuances in arrest disparities among different racial and ethnic subgroups.
An extensive body of research suggests that youth of color are more likely to experience an arrest than their White counterparts. Theoretically, these findings have been understood, at least in part, as the result of the differential deployment of law enforcement to areas with higher Black and Hispanic concentrations as well as stereotyped attributions of dangerousness and threat implicitly assigned to these suspects by police before and during encounters. However, previous studies typically have employed conventional racial/ethnic categorizations, which might obscure potential nuances in arrest disparities across subgroups. Using data on a statewide representative sample of adolescents from the 2018 Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (N = 54,611), these analyses reveal that the likelihood of a self-reported arrest is greatest among Haitian, West Indian/Caribbean, Dominican, and non-Hispanic Black youth. Further, Mexican and Puerto Rican adolescents have a higher risk of experiencing an arrest than members of other Hispanic subgroups.

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