Affirmative
Action and Cops
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
In
the furor that followed a daring and allegedly deadly Atlanta courthouse
escape March 11, some pointed to the differences in strength and
size of the suspect and the female deputy guarding him as a key
factor that allowed the man to get a gun.
But
what has been ignored in the case of Brian Nichols is the role that
affirmative action has played in hiring standards for police.
There
are extremely important benefits to having police departments that
mirror the characteristics of the general population. Females and
minorities are important for undercover work. A female victim of
crime might feel more comfortable talking to another woman. Women
might be particularly useful in domestic violence cases.
The
same holds true for minority victims of crime. Minority officers
who come from the local communities they are policing might also
bring knowledge about the area that makes them more effective officers.
The
problem is that because of large differences in strength and size
between men and women, different standards are applied to ensure
that there are more female officers. In the Nichols case, the difference
was stark: the suspect was 33 years old and 6 feet tall; the female
sheriff's deputy guarding him was 51 years old and 5-foot-2.
Similarly,
the intelligence tests used to screen officers have produced different
pass rates for different racial groups. To eliminate those differences,
there has been a strong move to stop giving these tests over the
last 30 years.
Some
argue that these criteria were not important in picking officers,
or that intelligence tests are culturally biased or worse, that
the screening criteria exist primarily to ensure that women and
minorities are excluded from the profession. There is possibly some
truth to this, but there is still the question about how far one
goes to ensure that a police force mirrors the community it is protecting.
Some
of these differences are fairly large. For example, in a study I
published in 2000 examining the effect of affirmative action on
police hiring, a comparison of male and female public safety officers
found that female officers had 32 percent to 56 percent less upper-body
strength and 18 percent to 45 percent less lower-body strength than
male officers.
In
New York City, because the physical strength rules were so weakened
during the 1980s, a former NYPD personnel chief complained at one
time that many police officers "lack the strength to pull the trigger
on a gun" and do not have the physical strength to run after suspects.
Part
of these differences between men and women can be offset by changing
technology and operating procedures. Cars can replace foot and bicycle
patrols. Two-officer units can replace single-officer units, though
these changes mean less contact between officers and the public
and less area covered.
Officers
can also be issued more protective gear. Indeed, my own published
research finds these exact changes in police departments when hiring
standards are changed for women.
We
also see that as a greater percentage of a department is made up
of women, the competition among men for the remaining slots increases
and the average strength and size of men admitted actually rises,
partly offsetting the weaker strength of the newer female officers.
The
net effect of changing hiring rules for women is mixed. I couldn't
find any significant overall change in crime rates when more female
police officers were hired (though rape rates did decline). There
were some less desirable consequences, and they fit in with the
recent experience we have just seen in the Atlanta courthouse attack.
Increasing
the number of women officers under these reduced strength and size
standards consistently and significantly increases the number of
assaults on police officers. In general, every 1 percent increase
in the number of women in a police force results in a 15 to 19 percent
increase in the number of assaults on the police, because women
tend to be weaker than men.
Why?
The more likely that a criminal's assault on a police officer will
be successful, the more likely criminals will do it. The major factor
determining success is the relative strengths and sizes of the criminal
and officer. The 200-pound Nichols might have decided not to try
to escape had his guard been closer to his own size.
My
research uncovered another interesting finding. Female officers
are more likely to accidentally shoot people. Each 1 percent increase
in the number of white female officers in a police force increases
the number of shootings of civilians by 2.7 percent. Because of
their weaker physical strength, female officers have less time to
decide on whether to fire their weapon. If a man makes a mistake
and waits too long to shoot a suspect who is attacking him, the
male officer still has a chance of using his strength to subdue
the attacker. Female officers (as was the case in Atlanta) will
lose control of the situation at that point.
While
creating a more diverse police force may produce some benefits,
we still shouldn’t forget the differences between men and women.
Just as women officers are better suited for some jobs, there are
other jobs that simply call for large men.
March
30, 2005
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2005 John Lott
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