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Police, courts, and corrections: Experiences of procedural injustice among Black adults

Racial disparities and a corresponding lack of trust have been documented within the criminal legal system. In response, criminal legal system actors have sought to strengthen the legitimacy of their agencies. However, legitimizing these agencies can be problematic. Some argue that the current crimi...

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Published in:American journal of community psychology 2023-03, Vol.71 (1-2), p.147-157
Main Authors: Martinez, Andrew, Swaner, Rachel, Ramdath, Cassandra, Kusiak Carey, Katherine
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Language:English
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creator Martinez, Andrew
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description Racial disparities and a corresponding lack of trust have been documented within the criminal legal system. In response, criminal legal system actors have sought to strengthen the legitimacy of their agencies. However, legitimizing these agencies can be problematic. Some argue that the current criminal legal system continues the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow as Blacks are disproportionately policed and incarcerated. As a framework, procedural injustice can offer a unique backdrop and interrogate ways in which the criminal legal system engages in delegitimizing actions that provoke noncompliance and enable social control. Using a procedural injustice lens, this study examines how justice‐involved Black adults experience mistreatment by justice system actors. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 84 Black adults in Newark and Cleveland. Study findings offer a comprehensive account of how participants experience procedural injustice as arrestees, defendants, and incarcerated persons. More specifically, participant narratives describe deliberately antagonistic, abusive, and dehumanizing treatment by justice‐system agents—often depicted as racially motivated. Participant accounts also describe this mistreatment as occurring in a context of coercion and powerlessness and as being institutionally sanctioned. Implications for the preservation of racial hierarchies, research, practice, and community psychology are discussed. Highlights Justice‐system agents engage in antagonistic, abusive, and dehumanizing behavior. Police mistreatment and inhumane conditions of confinement were significant participant concerns. Mistreatment is described as systematized and occurring in a context of coercion and powerlessness.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajcp.12631
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source Wiley; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adult
Alienation
Coercion
Community psychology
Community research
Compliance
Courts
criminal
Criminal justice
Criminal Law
Defendants
disparities
Humans
Imprisonment
Injustice
Legal system
Police
procedural justice
qualitative
Racial differences
Racial Groups
Racial inequality
Racism
Social control
Trust
title Police, courts, and corrections: Experiences of procedural injustice among Black adults
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