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2012 - Hate Crimes on Campus: Racial/Ethnic Diversity and Campus Safety

Attribution: Stotzer, Rebecca L., & Hossellman, Emily
Researchers: Emily HossellmanRebecca L. Stotzer
University Affiliation: University of Hawaii, Honolulu
Email: rstotzer@hawaii.edu
Research Question:
Examines whether the racial/ethnic diversity of a college or university is related to the rate of racially/ethnically motivated hate crimes on campus.
Published: 1
Journal Name or Institutional Affiliation: Journal of Interpersonal Violence
Journal Entry: Vol. 27, No. 4, Pp. 644-661
Year: 2012
Findings:
  • Schools with more Black and Latino students reported fewer hate crimes per year.
  • Minority faculty had no significant effect.
Keywords: African AmericanCollegeDiversityHispanicsNon Academic OutcomesViolenceRegions: NationalMethodologies: QuantitativeAnalysis Methods: Binomial Regression Model Sampling Frame:Four-year colleges in the United States
Sampling Types: PopulationAnalysis Units: StudentData Types: Quantitative-Cross Sectional
Data Description:
  • Data on campus hate crimes were compiled from the FBI (1998-2008). Demographic information about the campuses were compiled from the Carnegie Classification website, the National Center for Education Statistics, and the Princeton Review.
  • Dataset includes 418 baccalaureate degree (or higher) granting colleges and universities
  • DV: Mean number of hate crimes reported between 1998 to 2008 occurring at an institution
  • IV: Faculty diversity (percentage of minority faculty), minority student enrollment (percentage of Blacks, Latinos, and Asians)
  • Controls: campus size, public/private status, selectivity, residentiality, state hate crime laws, HBCU status
Theoretical Framework:
Relevance:
Archives: K-12 Integration, Desegregation, and Segregation Abstracts
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