The George Floyd Effect: How Protests and Public Scrutiny Changed Police Behavior

The George Floyd Effect: How Protests and Public Scrutiny Changed Police Behavior

By Marcel Roman, Harvard University, Klara Fredriksson, Beloit College, Chris Cassella, University of Texas at Austin, Derek A. Epp, University of Texas at Austin, and Hannah L. Walker, University of Texas at Austin

The murder of George Floyd in May 2020 sparked a wave of Black Lives Matter protests in many cities throughout the United States. Protesters’ demands ranged from constraints on police use of force to defunding and disbanding the police altogether. These have led some to worry about the possibility of a “Ferguson Effect,” where police withdraw from policing, and in particular discretionary stops and searches, with deleterious consequences for crime. Drawing on data from four cities, we evaluate whether the 2020 BLM protests impacted police behavior, and whether changes in policing negatively impacted public safety. Regression discontinuity-in-time estimates suggest that although depolicing followed the BLM protests, in some respects the quality of policing improved, and public safety was not clearly impacted. Our findings have important implications for research on policing, social movements, and structural inequality in cities.

 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*