Title
Experiencing Court, Experiencing Race: Perceived Procedural Injustice Among Court Users
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-2011
Publication Source
Race and Justice
Abstract
Critical race theorists (CRTs) posit that racism is endemic in American society, neutrality is a myth, experiential knowledge of racial minorities should be privileged and race is merely a social construction and is therefore unable to explain attitudes or behaviors. Analyzing a national sample of citizens with recent court experience, the present inquiry draws from these insights as it seeks to understand whether racial/ethnic groups differently experience court, and whether such differences could be accounted for by how actors in the court proceeding differently experience race. Our findings suggest that racial disparities in perceived procedural injustice indeed exist, but by following CRT we are able to get beyond a mere acknowledgment of their existence and work toward understanding how they exist. We also consider the role played by a number of other factors relating to one’s courtroom experience in shaping perceived procedural injustice and discuss both the theoretical and practical implications of our research.
Inclusive pages
202-227
ISBN/ISSN
2153-3687
Copyright
Copyright © 2011, the authors
Publisher
Sage Publications
Volume
1
Issue
2
Peer Reviewed
yes
eCommons Citation
Longazel, Jamie; Parker, Laurin S.; and Sun, Ivan Y., "Experiencing Court, Experiencing Race: Perceived Procedural Injustice Among Court Users" (2011). Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work Faculty Publications. 19.
https://ecommons.udayton.edu/soc_fac_pub/19
Comments
Permission documentation is on file.