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3 - “They Must Be Guilty of Something”: The Myth of Criminality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2024

Kristin J. Anderson
Affiliation:
University of Houston-Downtown
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Summary

Chapter 3 examines the common belief that those who are accused of crimes, particularly ethnic minorities, are probably guilty of something. The chapter begins by citing bias in news presentations of crime that reinforce the belief that people of color are criminally inclined. The process of criminalizing black and brown life begins early with disparities in discipline in schools resulting in the school-to-prison pipeline. Experiments on the shooting bias as well as actual police shootings is discussed next. The popularity of Stand Your Ground laws codifies white vigilantism. Biases that can enter all aspects of police investigation, criminal prosecution, sentencing, and the death penality are discussed. Experimental research exposing the role that harsh interrogations and false confessions in routing innocent suspects into the criminal legal system is presented as well. Juror behavior and their processing of evidence is also addressed in Chapter 3. The chapter concludes with suggested policy changes to prevent false confession and conviction, and toward more fairness in the criminal legal system.

Type
Chapter
Information
Benign Bigotry
The Psychology of Subtle Prejudice
, pp. 93 - 140
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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