Health Sector Management Faculty with Secondary Appointments Database
Health Sector Management
Fuqua School of Business
Duke University

 HOME > Fuqua > HSM > Faculty with Secondary Appointments    Search Help Login 

Publications [#238633] of Frank A. Sloan

Journal Articles

  1. Sloan, FA; Chepke, LM; Davis, DV, Race, gender, and risk perceptions of the legal consequences of drinking and driving., Journal of safety research, vol. 45 (June, 2013), pp. 117-125 [23708483], [doi]
    (last updated on 2025/05/31)

    Abstract:

    Introduction

    This study investigated whether subjective beliefs about the consequences of driving while intoxicated (DWI) differ by race/gender.

    Method

    Beliefs affect driving behaviors and views of police/judicial fairness. The researchers compared risk perceptions of DWI using a survey of drinkers in eight cities in four states with actual arrest and conviction rates and fines from court data in the same cities.

    Results

    With state arrest data as a benchmark, Black males were overly pessimistic about being stopped, whether or not actual drinking occurred, and attributed higher jail penalties to DWI conviction. That Black males overestimated jail sentences incurred by the general population suggests that they did not attribute higher jail penalties to racial bias. Arrest data did not reveal disparities in judicial outcomes following DWI arrest.

    Conclusions

    Blacks' subjective beliefs about DWI consequences may reflect social experiences, which are not jurisdiction- or crime-specific; this is a challenge to policymakers aiming to deter DWI by changing statutes and enforcement.

    Impact on industry

    If perception of bias exists despite no actual bias, a change in enforcement policy would not be effective, but a public relations campaign would be helpful in realigning beliefs.

Duke University * HSM * Faculty * Professional * Secondary * Staff * Reload * Login
x