Race, Ethnicity and Basic Law Enforcement Training Non-Completion: A National-Level Examination of Police Academies

Author:

Paoline Eugene A.1ORCID,Sloan John J.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Criminal Justice, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA

2. Department of Criminal Justice and Institute for Human Rights, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA

Abstract

Calls for the diversification of policing to better mirror communities served date to 1960s-era national commissions and continue to the present. Largely ignored in efforts to diversify policing is the role of race/ethnicity and completion of academy-based training of police recruits. This study used data collected from 615 U.S. basic law enforcement training (BLET) academies during 2018 to examine the correlates of BLET non-completion, including academy-level counts of racial/ethnic group membership of recruits, academy regional location, affiliation, stress of the training model used, and required weeks of BLET for state-level certification. Multivariate negative binomial regression modeling indicated that compared to non-completion counts of White non-Hispanic recruits, except for Asian non-Hispanic group members, the expected change in non-completion counts for members of all other racial/ethnic groups significantly increased holding all other variables in the model constant at their means. Implications for diversifying policing are discussed and recommendations made for further research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference39 articles.

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