Thursday, January 23, 2020
Is The Criminal Justice System Racially Biased? Essays -- essays resea
 Is the Criminal Justice System Racially Biased?      Most criminologist use two sources of criminal justice data in the  United States: the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) and the National Crime  Victimization Surveys (NCVS). The URC data is made from law enforcement  agencies and include crime incidents reported to or obtained by the police.  NCVS data is obtained from a very complex national survey of a sample of homes  and provide information about crime incidents and victims for both reported and  unreported crimes, excluding homicide. For my report I obtained research  information from questionnaires and from several text books. I gave the  questionnaire concerning bias in the criminal justice system to four whites,  four blacks, one Asia, and one Mexican. Although this sample is not  representative of racial attitudes in general, it can used to develop a better  sense of differences among students.       To discuss my findings fully I must define a few terms. The Criminal  Justice System is the network of agencies that respond to crime, including the  police, courts, jails, and prisons. Minority Group is a group of people who,  because of physical or cultural characteristics, are singled out for  differential and different and who regard them as objects of collective  discrimination. Discrimination is the act of singling out for unfair treatment.  Labeling is stereotyping, or putting a tag on someone, and treating them  accordingly. Self-fulling Prophecy is an expectation about how things will be  the situations that they predicted or expected. Finally, Differential  Association is the idea that interacting with others learns criminal behavior.       It is no secret whites and blacks in America experience life differently  because of their race. Therefore, whites and blacks view the criminal justice  system differently. My research found 70% of those studied agree the courts do  not offer equal treatment. Although both agree that the system is biased,  whites seem to have a more positive view about the whole system, while Blacks  feel the system is corrupt and works' against them. 50% of my non-white sample  and 20% of my white sample felt the courts discriminate. James Henslin, author  of the text Social Problems, states "[Violent crime] recedes with income ...  people with higher incomes live in better, more affluent and less viole...              ...that continue to  target poor minorities.       My results did show that there was differences in the way black and  white students in American society view the criminal justice system. Because  race can be compared to SES non-whites have a more negative view of how often  police discriminate. On the other hand whites are not ignorant to the negative  police discrimination non-whites face; nevertheless they feel it happens much  less than it actually does, or almost never. Similar, in the courts, more non-  whites feel their is discrimination. My answer to this could be that non-whites  are being convicted, going to jail and receiving the death penalty, while white  are the ones suing, and are not getting convicted for crimes when they are  arrested. While we all agree the criminal justice system is corrupt, my studies  show, whites and blacks disagree with the extent to which it happens. This is an  obvious result because blacks and whites are in two separate moral communities.  Blacks have been negatively labeled, and stigmatized as lower class citizens who  cause trouble. Inturn they have been the victim of legislation that keeps them  in the dismal status they are in.                       
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