Looking Deathworthy: Perceived Stereotypicality of Black Defendants Predicts Capital-Sentencing Outcomes” con­tains new research on race con­duct­ed by pro­fes­sors from Stanford, UCLA, Yale and Cornell, led by Prof. Jennifer Eberhardt. The arti­cle, to be pub­lished in the May 2006 edi­tion of Psychological Science, exam­ines whether the like­li­hood of being sen­tenced to death is influ­enced by the degree to which a black defen­dant is per­ceived to have a stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black appear­ance. Using data from a 1998 study in Pennsylvania by Prof. David Baldus, the research tend­ed to show that, among black defen­dants who kill white vic­tims, the more stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black a defen­dant is per­ceived to be, the more like­ly that per­son is to be sen­tenced to death, even con­trol­ling for oth­er appro­pri­ate vari­ables.

Using more than 600 death-eli­gi­ble cas­es from Philadelphia in which a black defen­dant was charged with killing a white vic­tim, the researchers found that 24.4% of defen­dants who appeared less stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black received a death sen­tence, while 57.5% of those who appeared more stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black received a death sen­tence. Students at Stanford rat­ed the degree of stereo­typ­i­cal fea­tures from pho­tos of black male defen­dants who had been con­vict­ed of mur­der in Philadelphia.

In a sim­i­lar exam­i­na­tion of black defen­dants accused of killing black vic­tims, the death sen­tenc­ing rates of those who were per­ceived as look­ing more stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black and those who appeared less stereo­typ­i­cal­ly black were near­ly iden­ti­cal (45% and 46.6%, respec­tive­ly).

The study was con­duct­ed by pro­fes­sors Jennifer L. Eberhardt (Stanford) , Paul G. Davies (UCLA), Valerie J. Purdie-Vaughns (Yale University), and Sheri Lynn Johnson (Cornell Law School). (Psychological Science, Volume 17, Number 5 (2006)). See Race and Studies.
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