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Prior research has shown that within a racial category, people with more Afrocentric facial features are presumed more likely to have traits that are stereotypic of Black Americans compared with people with less Afrocentric features. The present study investigated whether this form of feature-based stereotyping might be observed in criminal-sentencing decisions. Analysis of a random sample of inmate records showed that Black and White inmates, given equivalent criminal histories, received roughly equivalent sentences. However, within each race, inmates with more Afrocentric features received harsher sentences than those with less Afrocentric features. These results are consistent with laboratory findings, and they suggest that although racial stereotyping as a function of racial category has been successfully removed from sentencing decisions, racial stereotyping based on the facial features of the offender is a form of bias that is largely overlooked.
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Irene V. Blair
Charles M. Judd
Kristine M. Chapleau
Psychological Science
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Colorado System
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Blair et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a08ac730df715653be8b542 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0956-7976.2004.00739.x