Racial Profiling Research Papers - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Violence risk assessment tools are increasingly used within criminal justice and forensic psychiatry, however there is little relevant, reliable and unbiased data regarding their predictive accuracy. We argue that such data are needed to... more
Violence risk assessment tools are increasingly used within criminal justice and forensic psychiatry, however there is little relevant, reliable and unbiased data regarding their predictive accuracy. We argue that such data are needed to (i) prevent excessive reliance on risk assessment scores, (ii) allow matching of different risk assessment tools to different contexts of application, (iii) protect against problematic forms of discrimination and stigmatisation, and (iv) ensure that contentious demographic variables are not prematurely removed from risk assessment tools.
- by and +3
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- Ethics, Violence, Human Rights, Discrimination
Convocation Address at Bethel University, August 29, 2016 about recent troubles in Minnesota, particularly the shooting of Philando Castille, and our responsibility as followers of the Gospel. There is an audio link also available. After... more
Convocation Address at Bethel University, August 29, 2016 about recent troubles in Minnesota, particularly the shooting of Philando Castille, and our responsibility as followers of the Gospel. There is an audio link also available. After you click the link, it's the first one in the queue; fast-forward to 15:00: https://itunes.apple.com/us/itunes-u/2016-2017-chapel-college-arts/id1148681753?mt=10
Esta pesquisa teve como objetivo investigar a existência de mecanismos de produção da desigualdade racial na atuação das polícias do estado de São Paulo. Os dados sobre a produtividade policial publicados periodicamente não permitem a... more
Esta pesquisa teve como objetivo investigar a existência de mecanismos de produção da
desigualdade racial na atuação das polícias do estado de São Paulo. Os dados sobre a
produtividade policial publicados periodicamente não permitem a análise pela variável
cor/raça dos envolvidos. Em busca de indicadores que permitissem esta observação, a
equipe de pesquisa firmou uma parceria com a Ouvidoria da Polícia do Estado de São
Paulo para a produção de uma base de dados sobre a letalidade policial com
informações sobre o perfil das vítimas e dos policiais, incluindo a variável cor/raça de
ambos. Além da letalidade, a prisão em flagrante também foi usada como indicador,
porém, como os dados divulgados pela Secretaria de Segurança Pública do Estado de
São Paulo também não possibilitam a observação da variável cor/raça, a Coordenadoria
de Análise e Planejamento forneceu uma consulta específica à base de registro de
ocorrência, o que permitiu conhecer a distribuição das prisões em flagrante efetuadas
segundo a cor/raça dos presos. Os resultados da análise destas duas bases apontaram
que os negros são a maioria das vítimas de mortes praticadas por policiais,
especialmente os jovens e do sexo masculino. Também foi possível observar que a
proporção de negros presos em flagrante é maior do que a de brancos e que a maior
parte dos autores das mortes são policiais militares, sendo que parte significativa
pertence a grupamentos especiais, com destaque para a Força Tática. A conclusão da
pesquisa é que a desigualdade racial na segurança pública é evidenciada pela intensa
vigilância e ação policial violenta sobre um grupo populacional específico, ao passo que
outros grupos populacionais são menos visados sendo surpreendidos com menor
frequência em suas práticas. Os resultados são indicativos também de que,
possivelmente, as atividades criminais mais frequentemente cometidas por negros sejam
mais vigiadas, ao passo que atividades criminais mais comuns entre brancos despertem
menor atenção da polícia.
This article examines the Supreme Court of Canada’s development of the reasonable person standard in connection with the concept of “psychological detentions” which arises out of sections 9 and 10 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and... more
This article examines the Supreme Court of Canada’s development of the reasonable person standard in connection with the concept of “psychological detentions” which arises out of sections 9 and 10 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Specifically, it discusses the Court’s 2019 decision in R. v. Le where race is expressly incorporated within this reasonable person standard. Le stands in contrast to past decisions of the Court where the failure to substantially account for the racial dynamics of police encounters with racialized detainees has been criticized by various scholars. Drawing from critical race theory, this article argues that this incorporation is an important and welcome advancement in Charter jurisprudence, particularly in connection with the phenomenon of racial profiling practiced by various law enforcement officers.
In the years following the attacks on September 11th, 2001, the American government and other governmental democracies who fall victim to Americentric hegemony have eroded away many of the rights and civil liberties enjoyed by their... more
In the years following the attacks on September 11th, 2001, the American government and other governmental democracies who fall victim to Americentric hegemony have eroded away many of the rights and civil liberties enjoyed by their respective populaces in the name of increased security. Paramount to the effectiveness of security is surveillance, and surveillance as an institution, not just of our country, but of our world, has more than clearly made its way into our media. With this, we have seen the rise of Surveillance Dependant Media, media which
Racial discrimination in policing and its effect on police/minority youth relations were explored in a federally funded Canadian race relations initiative, using semistructured dialogue and voice-centered relational data analysis.... more
Racial discrimination in policing and its effect on police/minority youth relations were explored in a federally funded Canadian race relations initiative, using semistructured dialogue and voice-centered relational data analysis. Participants were front-line police officers and male youth of color. For enhancing communication between the groups, findings emphasized ongoing, face-to-face interaction. Substantial related concerns were: the need for trust, respect, self-preservation, information sharing, and improved police/minority youth relations. These were understood and highlighted as embedded within a system of ruling relations in the participants’ sociocultural context. Implications of these issues for police relations with racialized youth and their communities are discussed.
The sustained fixation on Muslims as the perennial suspects in domestic terrorism is a stereotype that continues to pervade counter-intelligence driven efforts. This research analyzes 113 cases of FBI contact with US Muslims living in Los... more
The sustained fixation on Muslims as the perennial suspects in domestic terrorism is a stereotype that continues to pervade counter-intelligence driven efforts. This research analyzes 113 cases of FBI contact with US Muslims living in Los Angeles, CA. Based upon these cases, this research suggests that every day, normal behavior becomes suspicious only when practiced by US Muslims, which would otherwise be acceptable, mundane, and unremarkable for ordinary white Christians, therefore constituting a form of "racialized state surveillance." The most prevalent questions asked by FBI agents to Muslims in this study were regarding religious practices or affiliation with religious organizations demonstrating the FBI faultily presumes that Muslim ties to their community and faith is abnormal, and worthy of state surveillance. This research reveals that FBI contact with Muslims is often not reliant upon actual indications of criminal activity, but instead the contact is predicated upon the suspicion of who is engaged in these behaviors. Under racialized state surveillance, these actions become hyperscrutinized and deemed worthy of FBI assessment.
This research tackles the interaction between police and racial inequality. More specifically, it dwells on how democratic policing manifests itself in racially unequal societies. After assessing the existence of racial inequalities... more
This research tackles the interaction between police and racial inequality. More specifically, it dwells on how democratic policing manifests itself in racially unequal societies. After assessing the existence of racial inequalities regarding the access to rights to life and safety, one wonders how this racial bias is produced and reproduced. To this effect, a review of the national literature on police violence and excessive use of force by
police is performed. We observe the development and consolidation of researches associating race to police brutality outcomes. We investigate the coinage of the term racial profiling, drawing on similarities and specificities of its use in Brazil and in the United States. In Brazil, we verify that researches on racial profiling focus either on accessible statistical data (regarding arrests by flagrante delicto and police use of lethal
force) or social representations that guide police practices and their process of suspicion. The second class of researches indicates an abstract institutional discourse in which racialization scarcely appears (generally in order to deny race) and emphasizes the importance of police agents' subjective constructions in materializing a race-biased conduct. Thus, our field research was guided by the question: in what ways the training provided by the Superior School of Military Police Soldiers of São Paulo state, in the city of São Paulo, influences race relations between police officers and citizens? The results confirm the literature directions that the institution curtails itself before themes such as racial inequality and racial discrimination by the police. It communicates abstracts
categories to be filled with representations – previous and post-training – of the suspect and the criminal. The self-conferred role of the Military Police dismiss its educational attribute in favor of an assimilationist perspective of knowledge, in which there is no space for reflexive analysis, only for body conditioning to automatic and intuitive responses.
This statement serves as a point of departure to reimagine how Canadian sociology can deepen and broaden its engagement with African Canadians’ experiences and anti-black racism as discussed in the papers that follow. Our... more
This statement serves as a point of departure to reimagine how Canadian sociology can deepen and broaden its engagement with African Canadians’ experiences and anti-black racism as discussed in the papers that follow. Our discussion—occasioned by the death of George Floyd’s death and the protests that follow—is occurring as the United Nations Decade for People of African Descent (2015 to 2024) is unfolding. This time invites us to examine sociologically the social-historical and political processes that have shaped African Canadian lives while noting the pervasive structural barriers that prevent our development and well-being.
This essay focus on the current state of racially biased policing in the United States. It looks in depth at the state of policing in Westchester County, NY. It concludes with an analysis of arrest data in the county, that shows severe... more
This essay focus on the current state of racially biased policing in the United States. It looks in depth at the state of policing in Westchester County, NY. It concludes with an analysis of arrest data in the county, that shows severe racial disproportionately.
As I write, Black Lives Matter protests continue throughout the United States and around the world. All Black Lives Matter and Black Trans Lives Matter protests are drawing thousands amid news of more violence against Black trans people.... more
As I write, Black Lives Matter protests continue throughout the United States and around the world. All Black Lives Matter and Black Trans Lives Matter protests are drawing thousands amid news of more violence against Black trans people. At least two incidents that incited protest – the murder of George Floyd and the assault on Iyanna Dior – have involved corner stores, and corner stores figure prominently in geographies of surveillance in the United States.[1] My reflection comes from this moment and from grappling, again, with how to write about Black death (Jones 2019a). Katherine McKittrick (2014: 20) writes that the “task is … to write blackness by ethically honoring but not repeating anti-black violences”, and that one way to do this is “through reading the mathematics of these violences as possibilities that are iterations of black life that cannot be contained by black death”. Below, I practice writing blackness ethically partly by embedding {Pauses}, invitations to stop, reflect, and give reverence.
Traditional tropes of racial stereotyping in both old and contemporary Hollywood cinema lend credence to the continual need for further progression of ethnic representation on screen. Information from sources such as the Motion Picture... more
Traditional tropes of racial stereotyping in both old and contemporary Hollywood cinema lend credence to the continual need for further progression of ethnic representation on screen. Information from sources such as the Motion Picture Association of America (2015: 2) and the Hollywood Diversity Report (2015) establish the industry's economic prominence and global influence over the modern-day film market. By using the sociological theories of Pierre Bourdieu, this research underlines the subliminally domineering effect of culture upon audience perception, thus highlighting the importance of ethnic equality on-screen and denouncing the negligent stereotypes that have plagued mainstream American cinema since conception.
America's racial history is imprinted into the subtext of their film culture; the release of The Birth of a Nation (1915) exemplified stereotypical racial profiling and how it's intricately tied to the US political system. After the socio-political event of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, the white saviour narrative evolved and is still in use, placing emphasis on friendly depictions of ethnic minorities, whilst covertly coercing the stereotypical minority into subservience for the white protagonist, due to their paternalistic, moral, and messianic qualities. The history of mainstream race depiction contextualise the recent Hollywood trend of Whitewashing (the replacement of a coloured character with a white actor), and combined with the cultural relevance of the capital gained from popular film media, the importance of racial progression and further democratisation of ethnic diversity in our globalised culture is apparent.
By drawing correlations between sociological culture theory, the progressive change of public consensus advocated by millennials, and Hollywood's self-detrimental adherence to traditional tropes of racial profiling, the contemporary filmography exemplified in this essay indicate that the demeaning and subversive qualities of the industry's traditional ethnic profiling is still prominent today. Whilst audience research advocates an increasing awareness towards this area of racial relations, the re-evaluation of race-representation on the big screen has become an ever more pressing and necessary endeavour.
Brown analyzes Shakespeare’s tragedy, Titus Andronicus, in light of Black Lives Matter and explores the concept of (racial) profiling. Brown argues that Titus stages the deindividualizing effects of racism and, consequently, contributes... more
Brown analyzes Shakespeare’s tragedy, Titus Andronicus, in light of Black Lives Matter and explores the concept of (racial) profiling. Brown argues that Titus stages the deindividualizing effects of racism and, consequently, contributes to a discourse about race in the early modern period that still resonates today. Overall, “‘Is Black so Base a Hue?’” presents Titus as a symptomatic case of anti-black violence. In conclusion, Brown turns to Julie Taymor’s 1999 Titus film adaptation and considers the complementary timelessness and timeliness of her work and Shakespeare’s.
This report is the result of collective work by the “Experiences of Encounters with the Police in Ottawa” research team. The research project was initiated and conducted by David Moffette, Sadia Jama, Lindsay Snow, and Chris Bruckert.... more
This report is the result of collective work by the “Experiences of Encounters with the Police in Ottawa” research team. The research project was initiated and conducted by David Moffette, Sadia Jama, Lindsay Snow, and Chris Bruckert.
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Over the last decade, a series of high-profile instances of police misconduct in Ottawa resulted in law enforce- ment coming under increased scrutiny. In this context the Experiences of Encounters with the Police in Ottawa (EEPO) research sought to document the experiences of individuals from disproportionately policed communities during encounters with police. The report draws on 208 encounter report forms and 43 interviews with individuals who had an interaction with police in Ottawa in the year prior to data collection.
Brand management can be described as an ongoing procedure that usually involves the task of sustaining consistency around the brand and effectively delivering on the values that a company holds dearly to forge favorable association and... more
Brand management can be described as an ongoing procedure that usually involves the task of sustaining consistency around the brand and effectively delivering on the values that a company holds dearly to forge favorable association and maintain long-term relationships with the target audience (Heding, Knudtzen, and Bjerre, 2015). This also comprises facets like visual presentation, packaging, competition, customer satisfaction, and so forth. It is also considered an important business practice that is utilized by companies of all sizes who endeavor to remain relevant within the minds of today’s powerful customers. Even though most organizations try to enhance the reputation and image of their brands in the eyes of their customers through building trust, providing high-quality products/services, and ensuring a courteous attitude towards their customers, their strategies and approaches are not always infallible (Kelley, Sheehan, and Jugenheimer, 2015).
Nevertheless, under any situation of crisis, those organizations who become successful in walking the talk by responding in an authentic and effective manner often emerge even stronger than those companies who fail to do so in such situations. This is also true for Starbucks that had to face a similar problem when it was accused of discriminating against two of its African-American customers in one of its stores at Philadelphia that caused it to face backlash from its customers on social media. However, the appropriate reputational management approaches which were utilized by Starbucks enabled it to manage this crisis appropriately, which helped it to win back the trust of its disgruntled customers (Shirdastian, Laroche, and Richard, 2019). Thus, this report will analyze the reputation management strategy of Starbucks that helped it to reduce the hostility among its customers and enabled it to maintain its brand reputation for which it is famous globally. The report will also provide details associated with different theories of branding and relate it with existing strategies of Starbucks that have enabled it to create brand awareness and brand recall among its customers. Furthermore, it will also highlight how successful Starbuck was in improving its image through its brand reputation management strategies that allowed it to win back the trust of its customers.
Set in the early 2010s, the backdrop of Kamila Shamsie's novel Home Fire (2017) is a familiar one to contemporary readers, colored by the rise of far-right populist movements and the increase in anti-Muslim initiatives. This article... more
Set in the early 2010s, the backdrop of Kamila Shamsie's novel Home Fire (2017) is a familiar one to contemporary readers, colored by the rise of far-right populist movements and the increase in anti-Muslim initiatives. This article examines how the novel engages with new Orientalist representations post-9/11 on two levels. Firstly, Shamsie's novel is shaped by the political narratives of the War on Terror and, in turn, responds to the upshot of these new configurations of power, reflecting how the difficulty of making sense of 9/11 exacerbated the Orientalist binary of East and West. Secondly, the novel reflects on the unenviable choice, for female kin to male terrorists, of either being Orientalized or re-orientalizing, a form of self-perpetrated Othering. This study is framed by re-orientalism theory in its analysis of how the East continues to engage the West in increasingly self-aware, multi-layered ways, constantly renegotiating positions of power and influence.
Most sociological research on racial discrimination has had an “inter-racial” focus. That is, researchers have been principally concerned with the disparate treatment that people of color receive relative to Whites in different social... more
Most sociological research on racial discrimination has had an “inter-racial” focus. That is, researchers have been principally concerned with the disparate treatment that people of color receive relative to Whites in different social contexts. However, recent theoretical work emerging from legal studies sug- gests that an alternative conception of “intra-racial” discrimination exists that extends beyond colorism. This theory of intra-racial discrimination stipulates that many organizations in the “post-racial” era desire some measure of racial diversity. Yet, in their efforts to achieve this racial diversity they screen people of color based on their degree of racial salience. Whether a given person of color is hired, promoted, or in the case of college admissions, accepted, is a function of whether or not Whites within the organization consider them racially palatable, or not overly concerned with race. This creates an incentive for people of color to work their identity to allay any concerns among Whites that they may be too racially salient. In this paper I critically review this work and attempt to further buttress its claims by highlighting how this process has clear historical precedent. I conclude by showing how the audit method can be used to empirically examine this practice contemporarily.
Collectif dirigé par Pascale Dufour, Francis Dupuis-Déri, avec des chapitres de Houda Asal, Céline Bellot, Michelle D. Bonner, Thierry Casséus, Pascal Dominique-Legault, Pascale Dufour, Francis Dupuis-Déri, Matthijs Gardenier, Jérémie... more
Community policing is a varying operation. Recent scholarship has attempted to grapple with this variation by examining differences in the way community policing operates across space (e.g., from neighbourhood to neighbourhood), but has... more
Community policing is a varying operation. Recent scholarship has attempted to grapple with this variation by examining differences in the way community policing operates across space (e.g., from neighbourhood to neighbourhood), but has problematically overlooked the issue of variation over time. Aiming to analyze both geographical and historical variation, this article examines community policing in the city of Montreal between 1978 and 1994. In this period, I argue, community policing embodied at least three distinct logics, each of which were linked to variations in the racial politics of the city: (1) a logic of collaboration, (2) a logic of compromise, and (3) a logic of counter-insurgency. These three logics, emerging at specific points in time, were also specific in their geography. Documenting geographical and historical variations in community policing, I conclude, can help to link diverse forms of policing to the differentiated socio-spatial hierarchies that shape it and better contribute to the making of what Gilmore (2017) "abolition geographies."
Certain proponents of slavery in the Islamic world assert that slaves exported from East Africa to the Arabian Peninsula or areas under Arabian domain within Africa were in fact acquired not for agricultural economic purposes but rather... more
Certain proponents of slavery in the Islamic world assert that slaves exported from East Africa to the Arabian Peninsula or areas under Arabian domain within Africa were in fact acquired not for agricultural economic purposes but rather for domestic labor. According to some scholars, this facilitated the integration of former slaves more thoroughly into Islamic communities than into the Atlantic slaveholding communities. However, while the theory of integration may hold true, at least in part, historical evidence suggests this may not be true in the case of the Bantu/Jareer1 population in the Horn of Africa, the main focus of this paper. Therefore, using the Bantu/Jareer
population of southern Somalia as a case study, this paper explores the contradictions prevalent in integration theory, the impact of slavery as a social institution, and the economic functions the slaves performed in Islamic countries.
A pesquisa teve como objetivo investigar a existência de mecanismos de filtragem racial na abordagem policial e as respostas institucionais construídas pelas polícias militares. Foi desenvolvida em quatro estados – São Paulo, Rio de... more
A pesquisa teve como objetivo investigar a existência de mecanismos de filtragem racial na abordagem policial e as respostas institucionais construídas pelas polícias militares. Foi desenvolvida em quatro estados – São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Distrito Federal e Minas Gerais. O objeto foi analisado a partir de três eixos: i) dados quantitativos e qualitativos oriundos de diferentes fontes, que permitiram
reconhecer como é produzida a identificação de suspeitos pelas polícias militares estaduais, assim como reconhecer os resultados das abordagens e demais ações policiais sobre os distintos grupos étnico-raciais; ii) compreensão das acusações de racismo institucional na atuação policial formuladas contra as polícias militares dos estados, recorrendo aos principais atores que formulam denúncias ou propõem ações de enfrentamento ao racismo no campo da segurança; iii) compreensão das respostas institucionais oferecidas pelas polícias militares diante das denúncias e propostas de enfrentamento ao racismo institucional, incluindo aqui a criação de procedimentos para a abordagem policial e a análise dos currículos dos cursos de formação policial. O principal achado da pesquisa foi a constatação, nos estados estudados, da existência da filtragem racial na abordagem policial, ou seja, que a racialização das relações sociais no Brasil se expressa de maneira contundente no campo da segurança pública.
- by Giane Silvestre and +5
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- Brazil, Racial Profiling, Public Security, Police and Policing
This work contains papers by six authors who participated in a 2007 conference about racial profiling convened by The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association. The authors who wrote the papers represent various disciplines,... more
This work contains papers by six authors who participated in a 2007 conference about racial profiling convened by The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association. The authors who wrote the papers represent
various disciplines, perspectives and experiences.
They all agree that racial profiling cannot be tolerated
in a multi-cultural society and accept that
racial profiling is not an effective law enforcement
strategy. However, they take different positions
about whether profiling is, in fact, practiced in
Canada and have different reasons for rejecting
profiling.
Somalia is generally thought of as a homogenous society, with a common Arabic ancestry, a shared culture of nomadism and one Somali mother tongue. This study challenges this myth. Using the Jareer/Bantu as a case study, the book shows how... more
Somalia is generally thought of as a homogenous society, with a common Arabic ancestry, a shared culture of nomadism and one Somali mother tongue. This study challenges this myth. Using the Jareer/Bantu as a case study, the book shows how the Negroid physical features of this ethnic group has become the basis for ethnic marginalization, stigma, social exclusion and apartheid in Somalia. The book is another contribution to the recent deconstruction of the perceived Somali homogeneity and self-same assertions. It argues that the Somalis, just like most societies, employ multiple levels of social and ethnic distinctions, one of which is the Jareer versus Jileec divide. Dr. Eno successfully portrays another Somalia, in which a mythical homogeneity masks the oppression and social exclusion suffered by some ethnic groups in the country
Contemporary approaches to integrating "self" and the "other"—such as multiculturalism, cultural diversity, race relations, inclusiveness strategies, or identity politics—are flawed from the perspective of traditional thought. At their... more
Contemporary approaches to integrating "self" and the "other"—such as multiculturalism, cultural diversity, race relations, inclusiveness strategies, or identity politics—are flawed from the perspective of traditional thought. At their core, modernist ideologies are inimical to and destructive of all human diversity. The new face of antipathy to pluralism is becoming more deceptive as it grows less focused on respecting diversity and more on promoting ideological uniformity and the erection of a global monoculture. This essay argues that it is from a metaphysical perspective that human diversity can be fully understood and can seek to reconcile the dichotomy of "self" and the "other".
Boyce and Miller explore the expansive nature of post-9/11 US border policing, focusing on the US-Canada divide, and the increased racial-ethnic profiling of Latinos. This illustrates the Border Patrol's character as a national... more
Boyce and Miller explore the expansive nature of post-9/11 US border policing, focusing on the US-Canada divide, and the increased racial-ethnic profiling of Latinos. This illustrates the Border Patrol's character as a national quasi-racial-ethnic police force, a development that raises a number of troubling questions that the authors identify and discuss.
Though states are founded in and dependent on successfully claiming a monopoly on the use of violent force and the certification of citizenship, these means suggest particular ends: the production of the social order. Police have the... more
Though states are founded in and dependent on successfully claiming a monopoly on the use of violent force and the certification of citizenship, these means suggest particular ends: the production of the social order. Police have the primary mandate to produce order and administer poverty. From a new abolitionist perspective, the particular social order of the U.S. is unique. The white race was founded through the production and maintenance of the color line and performed through a cross-class alliance of whites. Policing is deeply implicated in these processes. A historical account of police during the Herrenvolk era is provided. Finally, the persistence of racist policing is explained in light of a now officially color-blind political order, with officers functioning as petty sovereigns in a neoliberal era.
»Wir haben kein ›Racial Profiling‹-Problem«, behauptet Max Hofmann vom Verband Schweizerischer Polizeibeamter in einem Interview mit dem öffentlich-rechtlichen Schweizer Radiosender SRF. Solche und ähnliche Behauptungen äußern zahlreiche... more
»Wir haben kein ›Racial Profiling‹-Problem«, behauptet Max Hofmann vom Verband Schweizerischer Polizeibeamter in einem Interview mit dem öffentlich-rechtlichen Schweizer Radiosender SRF. Solche und ähnliche Behauptungen äußern zahlreiche Vertreter* innen der Polizei, aber auch der Politik – nicht nur in der Schweiz. Problematisch daran ist nicht nur die Behauptung selbst, sondern auch, dass solche Aussagen noch immer die öffentliche Auseinandersetzung um Racial Profiling dominieren und damit sowohl eine längst überfällige Debatte als auch notwendige Sanktionen gegen rassistische Polizeipraktiken weitgehend blockieren. Dieser Beitrag stellt zwei Fragen ins Zentrum: 1) Wen treffen die Kontrollen in welcher Weise? und 2) Wie wirken sich die Kontrollpraktiken auf die Betroffenen aus? Zur Klärung dieser Fragen analysieren wir die Interviewaussagen hinsichtlich der bei den Kontrollen vorgenommenen Zuschreibungen, Stigmatisierungen und Eingriffe in die körperliche Integrität. Das Ziel dieser Analyse ist, Racial Profiling als institutionellen beziehungsweise strukturellen Rassismus mit einer Vielzahl an Folgen sichtbar zu machen.
Hierfür greifen wir Ansätze der Intersektionalitätsforschung auf, um die jeweiligen Kontexte und die Überlagerungen verschiedener Ungleichheitsformen in den Blick nehmen zu können.
- by Tino Plümecke and +2
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- Discrimination, Racism, Intersectionality, Racial Profiling