Risk Assessment Tools and Racial/Ethnic Disparities in the Juvenile Justice System |
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Authors: | Lori D. Moore Irene Padavic |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, Florida State University |
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Abstract: | This paper addresses the possible consequences for racial and ethnic disparities of the growing reliance on risk assessment tools for sentencing in juvenile justice systems. These tools consider both legal factors (i.e. criminal history) and personal background factors (e.g. household composition, parents’ arrest history, the youth’s mental health, attitudes, school status, and current employment status) to predict the likelihood of recidivism, which then informs punishment decisions. Because they decontextualize race, the associations between race and risk factors linked to race could possibly create higher risk scores and harsher punishments for minority youth. |
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