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Public Influence on the Ethnic Disparity in Stop-and-Search Statistics in Four London Boroughs

Received: 20 February 2024    Accepted: 1 March 2024    Published: 13 March 2024
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Abstract

The literature on police stop-and-search events over the last two decades has heavily criticised the police for being racially disproportionate towards young black men compared to their white counterparts, resulting in the police being labelled as institutionally racist. However, none of the literature considers the fact that the public reporting of incidents may have had a major and direct influence on police stop-and-search outcomes. This significant issue remains a hidden and under-researched area, even though the disproportionality of police stop-and-search incidents is the leading cause of the negative relationship between the police and black and minority ethnic groups. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. A mixed method approach has been taken and primary data has been collected through freedom of information requests from the four borough command units (BCU) of the Metropolitan Police with densely populated areas with Black and Asian minority groups to investigate the link between public calls or reports of incidents and the initiation of police stop-and-search events. This data has been measured against national stop and search statistics in line with demographic data gathered from National Census data for the areas. The research concludes that there is discrimination against black and minority ethnic groups in members of the public reporting concerns. Freedom of information request for quantitative data from the Metropolitan Police reveals that public calls for reported incidents are on average 8.4 times more likely to describe the perpetrator as black European rather than white and 23.9 times more likely in the Central East borough when describing Asian ethnicity.

Published in Social Sciences (Volume 13, Issue 2)
DOI 10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11
Page(s) 19-27
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Bias, Discrimination, Ethnicity, Police, Stop & Search, Public Perception

References
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    Dippie, A., Hasan, M. (2024). Public Influence on the Ethnic Disparity in Stop-and-Search Statistics in Four London Boroughs. Social Sciences, 13(2), 19-27. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11

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    Dippie, A.; Hasan, M. Public Influence on the Ethnic Disparity in Stop-and-Search Statistics in Four London Boroughs. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(2), 19-27. doi: 10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11

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    Dippie A, Hasan M. Public Influence on the Ethnic Disparity in Stop-and-Search Statistics in Four London Boroughs. Soc Sci. 2024;13(2):19-27. doi: 10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11,
      author = {Aaron Dippie and Marina Hasan},
      title = {Public Influence on the Ethnic Disparity in Stop-and-Search Statistics in Four London Boroughs},
      journal = {Social Sciences},
      volume = {13},
      number = {2},
      pages = {19-27},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ss.20241302.11},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ss.20241302.11},
      abstract = {The literature on police stop-and-search events over the last two decades has heavily criticised the police for being racially disproportionate towards young black men compared to their white counterparts, resulting in the police being labelled as institutionally racist. However, none of the literature considers the fact that the public reporting of incidents may have had a major and direct influence on police stop-and-search outcomes. This significant issue remains a hidden and under-researched area, even though the disproportionality of police stop-and-search incidents is the leading cause of the negative relationship between the police and black and minority ethnic groups. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. A mixed method approach has been taken and primary data has been collected through freedom of information requests from the four borough command units (BCU) of the Metropolitan Police with densely populated areas with Black and Asian minority groups to investigate the link between public calls or reports of incidents and the initiation of police stop-and-search events. This data has been measured against national stop and search statistics in line with demographic data gathered from National Census data for the areas. The research concludes that there is discrimination against black and minority ethnic groups in members of the public reporting concerns. Freedom of information request for quantitative data from the Metropolitan Police reveals that public calls for reported incidents are on average 8.4 times more likely to describe the perpetrator as black European rather than white and 23.9 times more likely in the Central East borough when describing Asian ethnicity.
    },
     year = {2024}
    }
    

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    AU  - Aaron Dippie
    AU  - Marina Hasan
    Y1  - 2024/03/13
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    AB  - The literature on police stop-and-search events over the last two decades has heavily criticised the police for being racially disproportionate towards young black men compared to their white counterparts, resulting in the police being labelled as institutionally racist. However, none of the literature considers the fact that the public reporting of incidents may have had a major and direct influence on police stop-and-search outcomes. This significant issue remains a hidden and under-researched area, even though the disproportionality of police stop-and-search incidents is the leading cause of the negative relationship between the police and black and minority ethnic groups. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. This study addresses this gap by examining public bias in reporting incidents that result in police stopping and searching an individual. A mixed method approach has been taken and primary data has been collected through freedom of information requests from the four borough command units (BCU) of the Metropolitan Police with densely populated areas with Black and Asian minority groups to investigate the link between public calls or reports of incidents and the initiation of police stop-and-search events. This data has been measured against national stop and search statistics in line with demographic data gathered from National Census data for the areas. The research concludes that there is discrimination against black and minority ethnic groups in members of the public reporting concerns. Freedom of information request for quantitative data from the Metropolitan Police reveals that public calls for reported incidents are on average 8.4 times more likely to describe the perpetrator as black European rather than white and 23.9 times more likely in the Central East borough when describing Asian ethnicity.
    
    VL  - 13
    IS  - 2
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  • Health, Science and Welfare, Newcastle College University Centre, Newcastle, United Kingdom

  • Health, Science and Welfare, Newcastle College University Centre, Newcastle, United Kingdom

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