移民对警察的信任与家庭暴力:来自VAWA自行请愿的证据

Police trust and domestic violence among immigrants: evidence from VAWA self-petitions

Journal of Economic Geography · 2021
被引 23
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

研究发现庇护政策通过增强移民女性对警察的信任,提高了她们依据《反暴力侵害妇女法》自行请愿的比率,从而有助于应对家庭暴力问题。

Abstract

Abstract Domestic violence is a serious under-reported crime in the United States, especially among immigrant women. The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) was an attempt to partially address this problem by allowing battered immigrants to petition for legal status without relying on the sponsorship of an abusive U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident spouse. The tougher immigration policy climate may have made immigrant women more vulnerable to domestic violence, as well as more reluctant to report domestic violence to law enforcement. Sanctuary policies, which limit local law enforcement’s cooperation with federal immigration authorities, may counteract these effects. After exploiting the temporal and geographic variation in the adoption of interior immigration enforcement and sanctuary policies, we can successfully identify the impact of sanctuary policies, which help boost the rate of VAWA self-petitions. Additionally, we provide suggestive evidence of the channel through which this impact is likely taking place—namely through victims’ increased willingness to report cases and leave their abusers. Understanding survivors’ responses to immigration policy is crucial given growing police mistrust and immigrants’ vulnerability to crime.

移民警察信任家庭暴力VAWA自诉庇护政策