Is it Black and White? Testing racial framing effects of public reactions to newspaper vignettes of fatal officer‐involved shootings
Navarro John C.; Hansen Michael A.
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082788382
Tiivistelmä
Objectives
To investigate how race shapes public perceptions of a fatal officer- involved shooting of an armed male citizen depicted in a scenario without racial identifiers, intraracial, and interracial.
Methods
We distributed an online survey whereby respondents indicated justification, measured by four questions about the fatal officer-involved shooting, after being randomly assigned to three conditions that differed by the racial composition of the officer and armed male citizen. The control condition omitted racial identi- fiers, and two conditions depicted an interracial and intraracial deadly encounter between a White officer and a White or Black citizen.
Results
White and non-White respondents similarly perceived the intraracial shooting, but White respondents perceived the control condition and the interracial shoot- ing as more justified than non-White respondents.
Conclusions
An identical news article of a fatal officer-involved shooting can be perceived differently when altering the race of the officer and armed male citizen.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [27094]