School of Law, University of Oregon.
Law Hum Behav. 2023 Feb;47(1):182-200. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000509.
Hispanic individuals are a growing proportion of the general and carceral populations in the United States. This study examined the relationship between the type of sentences (prison, jail/probation) given to White, non-Hispanic individuals and to similarly situated individuals who were perceived to be Hispanic (any race) or perceived to be White but, based on validated estimates, self-identified as Hispanic.
Psychological theory indicates that, for group-based stereotypes and attitudes to impact decisions, decisionmakers must first identify and categorize target individuals as members of the relevant group. Following this theory, we predicted that individuals perceived by members of the criminal justice system to be Hispanic will be more likely to be sentenced to prison than similarly situated individuals perceived to be White. However, sentences of individuals predicted to have been misperceived as White but to self-identify as Hispanic will not differ from those of individuals accurately perceived as White.
We analyzed official state records of more than 220,000 unique sentencing decisions for nearly 200,000 individuals under state correctional supervision between 2005 and 2018, including demographic characteristics, statutory crime-seriousness and criminal-history scores from state sentencing guidelines, and sentencing outcomes.
Even after controlling for crime severity and criminal history, we found that individuals who were labeled as Hispanic in criminal justice records were nearly twice as likely to be sentenced to prison as those who were labeled as White (odds ratio [OR] = 1.95, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.86, 2.04]). By comparison, individuals who were labeled in criminal justice records as White but, on the basis of validated estimates, were predicted to self-identify as Hispanic had the same likelihood of being sentenced to prison as individuals who were accurately perceived to be White (OR = 1.01, 95% CI [0.94, 1.07]).
Results suggest that ethnic stereotypes or attitudes regarding Hispanic individuals may negatively impact criminal sentencing decisions regarding people perceived as Hispanic by actors in the legal system. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
西班牙裔美国人在美国的总人口和囚犯人口中所占比例不断增加。本研究考察了对白人非西班牙裔个体和被视为西班牙裔(任何种族)或被视为白人但根据经证实的估计自我认定为西班牙裔的个体(任何种族)给予不同类型的判决(监禁、监狱/缓刑)之间的关系。
心理学理论表明,为了使群体刻板印象和态度影响决策,决策者必须首先将目标个体识别并归类为相关群体的成员。根据这一理论,我们预测,被刑事司法系统成员视为西班牙裔的个体更有可能被判处监禁,而被视为白人的类似个体则不会。然而,被预测为被错误视为白人但自我认定为西班牙裔的个体的判决不会与被准确认定为白人的个体的判决有所不同。
我们分析了 2005 年至 2018 年间,超过 22 万名被州监管机构监管的个体的超过 22 万份独特判决的官方州记录,包括人口统计特征、州量刑指南中的法定犯罪严重程度和犯罪历史评分以及判决结果。
即使在控制了犯罪严重程度和犯罪历史后,我们发现被司法记录标记为西班牙裔的个体被判处监禁的可能性几乎是被标记为白人的个体的两倍(比值比[OR] = 1.95,95%置信区间[CI] [1.86, 2.04])。相比之下,被司法记录标记为白人但根据经证实的估计预测自我认定为西班牙裔的个体被判处监禁的可能性与被准确认定为白人的个体相同(OR = 1.01,95%CI [0.94, 1.07])。
结果表明,关于西班牙裔个体的种族刻板印象或态度可能会对被法律系统中的行为者视为西班牙裔的个体的刑事判决决策产生负面影响。