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Warriors vs. Guardians

More than 1,000 attendees聽from around the country聽tuned in on June 10 for聽鈥淩ace, Police and Unarmed Civilian Deaths: What Can Be Done?鈥濃攁 virtual conversation featuring David Harris, the Sally Ann Semenko Professor of Law at 51精品视频, and a national expert on the聽intersection of race and police shootings.

Harris has recently spoken about George Floyd鈥檚 death and how it has impacted police forces for聽听补苍诲听, in addition to聽聽and many other news outlets.

The event was another installment of #CRSPcast, a series of virtual talks hosted by 51精品视频鈥檚聽聽(CRSP) that initially dealt with conversations about race and COVID-19. But, after what CRSP Director聽聽described as 鈥渁 couple of harrowing weeks鈥 for Black people, the CRSP team decided to pivot to the timely topic of fatal police encounters, such as the one in Minneapolis on May 25 that took the life of Floyd.

Co-hosting the event was聽,聽professor and senior faculty fellow at CRSP.聽

The entire discussion is embedded above, but here are some highlights:

What the data show

The number of fatal police shootings across the country stands at about 1,000 a year, and according to Harris, is not fluctuating that much, despite police reforms in some cities. This number reflects fatal police shootings of armed and unarmed civilians, but does聽not聽take into account police kneeling on people鈥檚 necks, shots that wound people, use of tasers or other non-lethal force.聽

In fact, Harris says the Department of Justice keeps little data on these incidents because they cannot force local police departments to submit it. So, better sources for the numbers are media giants like The Washington Post and The Guardian, who jointly started compiling聽聽on fatal police shootings five years ago. Harris also says there鈥檚 a 鈥渄efinite racial skew鈥 on whom police force is used, with the rate of Black Americans fatally shot by police more than twice the rate for Whites. A recent聽聽stated that in Minneapolis, police use force on Black folks聽at seven times the rate they use it on Whites.

Race and fear: a toxic mix

Social psychologists have blazed a new path in studying implicit bias over the past 20 years and聽research聽shows that when study subjects are shown images of weapons and then a group of mixed-race people, their eyes go to the Black faces.聽

鈥淭hink about how that would impact an interaction聽between a police officer and a person of color,鈥 Harris said. Not only do Black people fear police confrontations, said Harris, but fear on the part of the officer is very much a part of police culture. He said that while officers train to overcome that fear, they often get into the mindset of being a warrior on the street to protect people from vicious predators.

Warriors vs. guardians

Rather than be a warrior, Harris said it would benefit officers to think of themselves as guardians of the public, protecting a community鈥檚 peace and tranquility. He鈥檇 like to see police forces adopt a different mental attitude鈥攖hinking of themselves to serve and help and to stop thinking of the citizenry as adversaries.聽

Wallace asked what the barriers are to this happening and Harris explained that many police have had an 鈥渦s-versus-them鈥 mentality for so long, and that attitude is what can prevent real change. Harris said cops are known to say, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a racial thing. It鈥檚 a blue thing. People don鈥檛 understand what we do.鈥澛

When asked by Huguley about how real accountability can be built into police reforms, Harris said the public needs to stay on top of it, keep going to meetings, keep the political pressure on political actors because 鈥渢hey respond to it.鈥

What can we do?

Finally, the discussion ended with suggestions for action. Harris said the public can do a lot to change things, not just when fatal shootings take place that galvanize the country, but at other times too. He suggests:

  • Fight for guardian-based policing.
  • Fight for transparency and accountability. A Chicago journalist waged a court fight that resulted in all police disciplinary records in Illinois being made public record.
  • Fight for the decriminalization of marijuana, possession of small amounts of drugs, sleeping on park benches, minor traffic offenses and other instances that need not be聽criminal acts. Harris said this would scale down police involvement.
  • 聽Vote for candidates who will bring about change. Harris said this has been done in cities like聽Philadelphia, Boston and Chicago because the people demanded it. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the聽real聽power,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his is an important discussion at the heart of so much pain and suffering right now in the Black community,鈥 said Huguley, following the event. 鈥淲e were glad to work with Professor Harris to bring data and actionable steps to the conversation."