“Conditional on the crime context of the neighborhood … perceptions of the danger posed by crime were higher in neighborhoods with greater numbers of race-ethnic minorities, in particular African–Americans and Latinos."
“Perceptions of the police as unbiased or as biased against Whites motivates… support for the candidate who has been unconditionally supportive of police and antagonistic towards … the Black Lives Matter movement. Perceptions … may be a proxy for anti-Black sentiment."
“Differential policing and differential perceptions of the police may in turn be relevant to explaining crime differences between neighborhoods of different race/ethnic compositions… [and] further deteriorate the neighborhood’s capacity to address problems like crime."