Volume 15, Issue 1
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Race, Crime, and the Micro‐Ecology of Deadly Force

David Klinger

Corresponding Author

University of Missouri—St. Louis

Direct correspondence to David Klinger, Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Missouri—St. Louis, One University Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63121 (e‐mail: KlingerD@msx.umsl.edu).Search for more papers by this author
Richard Rosenfeld

University of Missouri—St. Louis

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Daniel Isom

University of Missouri—St. Louis

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Michael Deckard

University of Missouri—St. Louis

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First published: 17 November 2015
Citations: 67

Abstract

Research Summary

Limitations in data and research on the use of firearms by police officers in the United States preclude sound understanding of the determinants of deadly force in police work. The current study addresses these limitations with detailed case attributes and a microspatial analysis of police shootings in St. Louis, MO, between 2003 and 2012. The results indicate that neither the racial composition of neighborhoods nor their level of economic disadvantage directly increase the frequency of police shootings, whereas levels of violent crime do—but only to a point. Police shootings are less frequent in areas with the highest levels of criminal violence than in those with midlevels of violence. We offer a provisional interpretation of these results and call for replications in other settings .

Policy Implications

Nationwide replications of the current research will require the establishment of a national database of police shootings. Informative assessments of a single agency's policies and practices require comparative information from other agencies. We recommend specific data elements to be included in such an information system that would shed further empirical light on the interconnections among race, crime, and police use of deadly force. The database also would contribute to the development of evidence‐based policies and procedures on deadly force—an urgent public priority in light of recent controversial police shootings across the United States .

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 67

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