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Journal Article

Citation

Jacobs D, O'Brien RM. Am. J. Sociol. 1998; 103(4): 837-862.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, University of Chicago Press)

DOI

10.1086/231291

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Political or threat explanations for the state's use of internal violence suggest that killings committed by the police should be greatest in stratified jurisdiction with more minorities. Additional political effects such as race of the city's mayor or reform political arrangements are examined. The level of interpersonal violence the police encounter and other problems in departmental environments should account for these killing rates as well. Tobit analyses of 170 cities show that racial inequality explains police killings. Interpersonal violence measured by the murder rate also accounts for this use of lethal force. Separate analyses of police killings of blacks show that cities with more blacks and a recent growth in the black population have higher police killing rates of blacks, but the presence of a black mayor reduces these killings. Such findings support latent and direct political explanations for the internal use of lethal force to preserve order.

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