Southern Public Health and Criminal Justice Research Center, Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas, United States of America.
Department of Health Sciences, Center for Health Equity Research, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Jun 8;17(6):e0268987. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0268987. eCollection 2022.
Racial discrimination and racial identity may compete to influence incarceration risk. We estimated the predicted days incarcerated in a national US sample of Black, Latino/Latina, and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) individuals.
We used the 2012-2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (n = 14,728) to identify individual incarceration history. We used zero-inflated Poisson regression to predict the number of days incarcerated across racial discrimination and racial identity scores.
Racial discrimination and identity varied between races/ethnicities, such that racial discrimination exposure was highest among Hispanic individuals, while racial identity was highest among Black individuals. Racial discrimination was positively associated with days incarcerated among Black individuals (β = 0.070, p<0.0001) and AI/AN individuals (β = 0.174, p<0.000). Racial identity was negatively associated with days incarcerated among Black individuals (β = -0.147, p<0.0001). The predicted number of days incarcerated was highest among Black individuals (130 days) with high discrimination scores.
Racial discrimination and racial identity were associated with days incarcerated, and the association varied by racial/ethnic sub-group. Informed by these findings, we suggest that intervention strategies targeting incarceration prevention should be tailored to the unique experiences of racial/ethnic minoritized individuals at the greatest risk. Policies aimed at reversing mass incarceration should consider how carceral systems fit within the wider contexts of historical racism, discrimination, and structural determinants of health.
种族歧视和种族认同可能会相互竞争,影响监禁风险。我们估计了美国黑人、拉丁裔/拉丁裔和美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)个体的全国样本中被监禁的预期天数。
我们使用了 2012-2013 年全国酒精与相关情况流行病学调查 III(n = 14728)来确定个体监禁史。我们使用零膨胀泊松回归来预测种族歧视和种族认同评分下被监禁的天数。
种族歧视和认同在种族/族裔之间存在差异,例如,西班牙裔个体的种族歧视暴露率最高,而黑人个体的种族认同率最高。种族歧视与黑人个体(β = 0.070,p<0.0001)和 AI/AN 个体(β = 0.174,p<0.000)被监禁的天数呈正相关。种族认同与黑人个体(β = -0.147,p<0.0001)被监禁的天数呈负相关。具有高歧视评分的黑人个体的预计被监禁天数最高(130 天)。
种族歧视和种族认同与被监禁的天数有关,而且这种关联因种族/族裔亚组而异。基于这些发现,我们建议针对监禁预防的干预策略应针对风险最大的少数族裔个体的独特经历进行定制。旨在扭转大规模监禁的政策应考虑到监禁制度如何与历史种族主义、歧视和健康结构决定因素的更广泛背景相契合。