Researchers based at the University of North Carolina found a strong sta­tis­ti­cal rela­tion­ship between the lev­el of racial resent­ment in a state and the num­ber of death sen­tences hand­ed down on Black peo­ple. In par­tic­u­lar, racial resent­ment was a stronger pre­dic­tor of Black death sen­tenc­ing rates than con­ser­v­a­tive ide­ol­o­gy, even when con­trol­ling for sev­er­al fac­tors such as homi­cide and vio­lent crime rates. Writing in the Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics, the authors not­ed: “[W]e find that racial hos­til­i­ty trans­lates direct­ly into more death sen­tences, par­tic­u­lar­ly for Black offenders.” 

The research con­nects the prac­tice of lynch­ing, which is a pre­cur­sor to cur­rent racial resent­ment, to the preva­lence of death sen­tences in mul­ti­ple ways: Our results sug­gest that the his­tor­i­cal lega­cies of lynch­ings car­ry indi­rect effects for death sen­tenc­ing through [two] path­ways. On the one hand, lynch­ings indi­rect­ly increase death sen­tences as a func­tion of con­tem­po­rary racial resent­ment, con­sis­tent with a racial antipa­thy inter­pre­ta­tion. On the oth­er hand, there is also an indi­rect effect of his­tor­i­cal lynch­ings through con­tem­po­rary con­ser­v­a­tive ide­olo­gies reflec­tive of antigov­ern­ment inter­ven­tion, con­sis­tent with the vigilantism hypothesis.” 

Looking back at the his­tor­i­cal effort to fix pri­or prob­lems with the death penal­ty in the U.S., the authors con­clud­ed that, The mod­ern death penal­ty is sup­posed to be reserved for the most heinous crimes and those who are the most deserving…And yet,” they stat­ed, the new and improved death penal­ty we ana­lyze here appears to have the same flaws that Justice Stewart and oth­ers iden­ti­fied back in 1972.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Frank R. Baumgartner, Christian Caron, and Scott Duxbury, Racial Resentment and the Death Penalty, The Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics, Nov. 2022