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Detecting anomalies in data on government violence

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Can data on government coercion and violence be trusted when the data are generated by state itself? In this paper, we investigate the extent to which data from the California… Click to show full abstract

Can data on government coercion and violence be trusted when the data are generated by state itself? In this paper, we investigate the extent to which data from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) regarding the use of force by corrections officers against prison inmates between 2008 and 2017 conform to Benford's Law. Following a growing data forensics literature, we expect misreporting of the use-of-force in California state prisons to cause the observed data to deviate from Benford's distribution. Statistical hypothesis tests and further investigation of CDCR data—which show both temporal and cross-sectional variance in conformity with Benford's Law—are consistent with misreporting of the use-of-force by the CDCR. Our results suggest that data on government coercion generated by the state should be inspected carefully before being used to test hypotheses or make policy.

Keywords: violence; anomalies data; government; data government; detecting anomalies; use force

Journal Title: Political Science Research and Methods
Year Published: 2021

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