The Role of Bias in Police Profiling
Keywords:
Police Profiling, Bias, Forensic Criminology, Racial Disparity, Predictive Policing, Criminal Justice ReformAbstract
Police profiling is intended to guide investigative focus based on behavioral patterns, prior crime statistics, and risk assessments; however, cognitive bias, structural inequality, and historical discrimination frequently distort profiling practices. These biases can lead to disproportionate targeting of racial, ethnic, socioeconomic, and cultural groups, resulting in civil rights violations, wrongful detentions, reduced police legitimacy, and feedback loops that reinforce biased crime data. This paper analyzes psychological biases, systemic factors, and policy failures that influence profiling decisions. Using case studies from the United States, South Africa, Brazil, and the United Kingdom, the study proposes a Bias-Resilient Profiling Framework for ethical, evidence-based policing.

