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Journal Article

Citation

Zane SN. Youth Violence Juv. Justice 2018; 16(4): 418-441.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1541204017730388

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In the context of the criminal justice system, the minority threat hypothesis posits that a growing minority population will exacerbate racial and ethnic disparities as those in power seek to establish social control over the threatening population. Decades of research have produced mixed findings, possibly due to the varied approaches to testing this hypothesis as well as the different populations to whom it is applied. To fully explore the racial and ethnic threat hypotheses for an underexamined population--juveniles transferred to criminal court--and an underexamined outcome--pretrial detention--the present article employs a series of multilevel models to test several versions of the hypothesis. Specifically, the article distinguishes between two measures of minority threat--static and dynamic--and two types of threat effects--diffuse and targeted.

FINDINGS indicate limited support for the minority threat hypothesis in all forms. Several interpretations are offered, ranging from consideration of the need for more informed measures of threat to a possible need to modify or abandon the minority threat hypothesis in the context of juvenile and criminal justice processing.

Keywords: Juvenile justice


Language: en

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