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Articles

On Racial Disparities in Recent Fatal Police Shootings

Pages 9-18 | Received 11 Jun 2018, Accepted 22 Nov 2019, Published online: 29 Jan 2020
 

Abstract

Fatal police shootings in the United States continue to be a polarizing social and political issue. Clear disagreement between racial proportions of victims and nationwide racial demographics together with graphic video footage has created fertile ground for controversy. However, simple population level summary statistics fail to take into account fundamental local characteristics such as county-level racial demography, local arrest demography, and law enforcement density. Using data on fatal police shootings between January 2015 and July 2016, I implement a number of straightforward resampling procedures designed to carefully examine how unlikely the victim totals from each race are with respect to these local population characteristics if no racial bias were present in the decision to shoot by police. I present several approaches considering the shooting locations both as fixed and also as a random sample. In both cases, I find overwhelming evidence of a racial disparity in shooting victims with respect to local population demographics but substantially less disparity after accounting for local arrest demographics. I conclude the analyses by examining the effect of police-worn body cameras and find no evidence that the presence of such cameras impacts the racial distribution of victims. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

Acknowledgments

A very sincere thank-you to the Washington Post for compiling and providing open access to the dataset of fatal police shootings. This project was motivated in large part by the availability of such data and likely could not have been completed without such access. Thank you as well to numerous colleagues and students for providing helpful feedback on early versions of this work.