Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States

How much life in the United States is lost to encounters with the police? The author builds on a demographic life table model by Edwards, Lee, and Esposito to estimate, for race- and gender-specific populations, how many years of life are lost in two categories of police encounters: (1) encounters i...

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Main Author: Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-08-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120948718
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spelling doaj-21edb52bbf2348a9b6cb23f5810c05d92021-04-02T13:02:38ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312020-08-01610.1177/2378023120948718Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United StatesElizabeth Wrigley-Field0University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Minneapolis, MN, USAHow much life in the United States is lost to encounters with the police? The author builds on a demographic life table model by Edwards, Lee, and Esposito to estimate, for race- and gender-specific populations, how many years of life are lost in two categories of police encounters: (1) encounters involving officer use of force and (2) all deaths involving police encounters. Average life years lost by individuals who are killed ranges from 39 years (white men) to 52 years (Native women). The loss of years per 100,000 people over their collective lifetimes is largest for Black men, with 5,696 years of life lost to all encounters with police, of which 3,772 years are lost to police use of force. This implies a loss of roughly 16,000 years of life for recent cohorts of Black men. These results provide context for current debates surrounding the cost and necessity of protests.https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120948718
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
spellingShingle Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
Socius
author_facet Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
author_sort Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
title Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
title_short Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
title_full Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
title_fullStr Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Life Years Lost to Police Encounters in the United States
title_sort life years lost to police encounters in the united states
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Socius
issn 2378-0231
publishDate 2020-08-01
description How much life in the United States is lost to encounters with the police? The author builds on a demographic life table model by Edwards, Lee, and Esposito to estimate, for race- and gender-specific populations, how many years of life are lost in two categories of police encounters: (1) encounters involving officer use of force and (2) all deaths involving police encounters. Average life years lost by individuals who are killed ranges from 39 years (white men) to 52 years (Native women). The loss of years per 100,000 people over their collective lifetimes is largest for Black men, with 5,696 years of life lost to all encounters with police, of which 3,772 years are lost to police use of force. This implies a loss of roughly 16,000 years of life for recent cohorts of Black men. These results provide context for current debates surrounding the cost and necessity of protests.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120948718
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