Tuesday 12 October 2010

But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice

But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice
Author: Vikas K. Gumbhir
Edition:
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 1593322143



But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice: Recent Scholarship)


Gumbhir offers conceptual, theoretical, and empirical innovations to help unravel and illuminate the forces that produce racial disparities in law enforcement. Download But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice: Recent Scholarship) from rapidshare, mediafire, 4shared. Gumbhir provides a theoretical framework for analyzing racial differences in police contacts, as well as a conceptualization of racial profiling that emphasizes police procedures related to the War on Drugs specifically pretext stop practices. Drawing on a grounded statistical analysis of vehicle stop data from a Pacific Northwest community, Gumbhir exposes racial disparities in terms of stops, searches, enforcement actions (citations and arrests), and other variables of interest. By studying patterns in the results, Gumbhir concludes that the police disproportionately apply pretext Search and find a lot of education books in many category availabe for free download.

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But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice Free


But Is It Racial Profiling?: Policing, Pretext Stops, and the Color of Suspicion (Criminal Justice) (Criminal Justice education books for free. Gumbhir provides a theoretical framework for analyzing racial differences in police contacts, as well as a conceptualization of racial profiling that emphasizes police procedures related to the War on Drugs specifically pretext stop practices By studying patterns in the results, Gumbhir concludes that the police disproportionately apply pretext

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