Bibtex export

 

@article{ Gardner2014,
 title = {Racial profiling as collective definition},
 author = {Gardner, Trevor G.},
 journal = {Social Inclusion},
 number = {3},
 pages = {52-59},
 volume = {2},
 year = {2014},
 issn = {2183-2803},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v2i3.126},
 abstract = {Economists and other interested academics have committed significant time and effort to developing a set of circumstances under which an intelligent and circumspect form of racial profiling can serve as an effective tool in crime finding-the specific objective of finding criminal activity afoot. In turn, anti-profiling advocates tend to focus on the immediate efficacy of the practice, the morality of the practice, and/or the legality of the practice. However, the tenor of this opposition invites racial profiling proponents to develop more surgical profiling techniques to employ in crime finding. In the article, I review the literature on group distinction to discern its relevance to the practice and study of racial profiling. I argue that the costs of racial profiling extend beyond inefficient policing and the humiliation of law-abiding minority pedestrians and drivers. Racial profiling is simultaneously a process of perception and articulation of relative human characteristics (both positive and negative); it binds and reifies the concepts of race and criminality, fixing them into the subconscious of the profiled, the profiler, and society at large.},
 keywords = {Rassismus; racism; Kriminalität; criminality; Soziologie; sociology; Polizei; police; Gruppenbildung; group formation; Ethnizität; ethnicity; Exklusion; exclusion; Inklusion; inclusion; soziale Integration; social integration; Praxis; practice; Rhetorik; rhetoric}}