RT Article T1 Juvenile court outcomes following youth’s first arrest: a national test of the racial and ethnic threat hypothesis JF Crime & delinquency VO 65 IS 2 SP 183 OP 214 A1 Andersen, Tia S. A2 Ouellette, Heather M. LA English YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1586340247 AB Using nationally representative data, this research examined the associations between indicators of minority threat and juvenile justice processing following a first arrest. At intake, increasing Black presence in the community resulted in leniency, rather than severity. Once adjudicated, the size of the Black population had a nonlinear inverted-U shaped relationship with probability of placement. Increasing Hispanic presence was associated with leniency in disposition, and economic threat was not significantly related outcomes. Indicators of minority threat did not exacerbate outcomes for minority youth. These findings suggest that, contrary to the expectations of minority threat theory, the growing presence of minorities in communities may weaken social control and harsh punishments, particularly once the size of the minority population reaches a critical threshold. K1 Juvenile justice K1 Punishment K1 Quantitative K1 Theory DO 10.1177/0011128718793616