Crime was always a hot topic in sociology. There are many reasons for people to commit crimes. There is no way to locate the cause of the crime. It shows the relationship between race and crime. More specifically, we will discuss the possibility of minority participation in the majority of population, discrimination, race profiling, and criminal justice system for environmental offenders. This is a fixed concept that blacks are more likely to be criminals than whites.
Historically, criminal statistics have played a central role in discussing the relationship between racial and crime in the United States. Because their purpose is not only to record the type of crime committed but also to record information about individuals involved in the crime, criminologists and sociologists will use crime rate statistics to make statistics on the crime rate I continue using it. Sexual Statement Damage, arrest, prosecution, conviction, imprisonment, etc. Regardless of their perception of causality, scholars acknowledge that the proportion of ethnic and ethnic minorities is disproportionate in arrest and victimization reports used to compile crime rate statistics. However, there are many controversies about this unbalanced reason.
In the United States, racial profiling is ruled as unconstitutional and it can be an infringement of citizenship. Discussion that the relation between ethnicity and crime is excessively representative of a specific minority at various stages of the criminal justice system continues. Race taxonomic studies based on DNA cluster analysis (see Lewontin's Fallacy) have made police authorities pursue suspects based on the ethnic classification of DNA evidence left at crime scenes. DNA analysis successfully helped the police determine the race of the victims and criminals. This classification is called "biogeographic ancestry"
The relationship between the proportion of different races within the surveyed area and the crime rate is usually in the same relationship with the crime rate across the country or there is no significant relationship. The most frequently studied are the correlation between blacks and Hispanic populations and crime in specific areas. These data may reveal a possible connection, but these data are functionally uncertain due to various other relevant factors overlapping race and ethnic groups. There is a correlation between blacks and Hispanics and crime, but considering gender, the data implies that the relationship between poverty and crime is much stronger than crime and other peoples. Given only racial factors, the direct relationship between crime and class is relatively weak. Given gender and family history, classes and crimes are more strongly related to race or ethnicity.