A Kent State University economics professor is part of a federally funded study of police bias. says the $280,000 grant looks build upon his earlier research on bias in younger officers.
Rohlin, and another economics professor from , have been studying the Syracuse City Police Department. He says they鈥檝e found some encouraging news.
鈥淚t seems to be that newer cops, young cops, are profiling, but that they鈥檙e improving over time. It takes about three to four years and they seem to improve. So it鈥檚 not some inherent bias against minorities, it seems to be, at least in the early analysis that we鈥檙e done, they improve over time which means it鈥檚 not intentional, it鈥檚 just a lack of information. That鈥檚 called in economics, statistical discrimination.鈥
Rohlin compares that to someone who automatically assumes a person with a college degree is smart. With the federal grant, he says researchers will take this information a step further. Now, they are going to start looking more deeply at what causes this bias based on an officer鈥檚 experience. This will include an examination of how certain pairings of officers may impact bias and profiling.
鈥淢entoring, and what happens if you鈥檙e an unbiased officer and you鈥檙e put with a biased officer, how do these interactions work? And we have not done any research on that yet, but we鈥檙e going to be looking at what we call network effects in economics, that what happens when you put different pairings together. Or regionally if you put certain cops near other cops, does their knowledge spill over?鈥
Rohlin believes this research could lead to policy changes requiring police department to always pair rookie officers with seasoned veterans who are less prone to racial bias on the job. The Justice Department funding follows heightened nationwide concern over police shootings, particularly the shootings of black suspects by white officers.
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