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5 - Racial Outcomes

Killings of Black Americans by Police and Structural Corruption

from Part II - What Difference Does It Make? Consequences of Corruption

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2025

Oguzhan Dincer
Affiliation:
Illinois State University
Michael Johnston
Affiliation:
Colgate University, New York
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Summary

Police killings of Black Americans are influenced not only by specific law enforcement situations but also by corruption – where corruption in a state is more extensive, police killings are more frequent. State-level factors may seem remote from local policing, but in fact the constitutional and political connections are strong and deep-rooted. Police killings of Black Americans also reflect contrasts in the states’ political cultures and aspects of communities’ racial composition. Median income levels and the economic gaps between Black and White populations also influence the patterns of police killings. Lobbying activities, political party competition, and police unionism contribute to overall levels of accountability. These diverse and often deep-rooted influences, many of them linked to the expectations communities have of their police and the attitudes of police toward their work and the surrounding communities, show that dealing with the problem of police killings of Black Americans will require fundamental changes of many sorts.

Type
Chapter
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Corruption in America
A Fifty-Ring Circus
, pp. 78 - 96
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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