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#SWEduActs Teach-In
Police brutality as a form of
structural racism
Elspeth Slayter, MSW, PhD
School of Social Work
Salem State University
Learning objectives
1. Define police brutality
2. Explore history of police brutality as a
form of structural racism
3. Discuss prevalence
4. Consider causes
5. Review responses
6. Action steps
Definition
• “Police brutality” is used to refer to various
human rights violations by police
• Includes beatings, racial abuse, unlawful
killings, torture, or indiscriminate use of riot
control agents at protests
(Amnesty International, 2020)
Why social workers need to
focus on police brutality:
• Experience of police brutality is traumatic,
life-altering & sometimes lethal
• Police actions are, arguably, state
sanctioned forms of social control that
impact our communities
• Circa 18,000 law enforcement agencies in
U.S. (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2016)
We’ve all
heard the long
list of names…
…but this is not new…
Smithsonian Museum Collection, 2020
Origins of U.S. police force
• 1704: First formal slave
patrol created in colonies,
roots of current police
system
• Focus: Preservation of
slavery
• Reconstruction: Sheriffs
functioned enforced
segregation &
disenfranchisement of freed
slaves
(Waxman, 2017)
BIPOC an early target of police
• 1838: 1st police department in Boston
• Communities most targeted by harsh
tactics: Recent European immigrants
• As Black people fled horrors of Jim Crow
south, they too became victims
(Nodjimbadem, 2020)
Police work always racialized
• 1929: Chicago
• Police killings: 30%
Black people
• Black people
constituted only 5% of
population
• Racialized focus of
police work (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
Problems with police noted
• 1931-32
• National Commission
on Law Observance &
Enforcement
• Commissioned a
report on
“Lawlessness in Law
Enforcement” (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
Violence in policing pervasive
• 1960s: Civil Rights
Era
• Aggressive dispersion
tactics
• Pervasive violent
policing in
communities of color
every day (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
Violence in policing pervasive
• 1965
• Congressman John
Lewis in Selma,
Alabama
• “Bloody Sunday”
(Nodjimbadem, 2020)
The power of video emerges
• 1991
• Beating of Rodney
King in Los Angeles,
CA, 50+ times
• Use of amateur video
allowed world to
witness (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
Case causes widespread outcry
• 1997
• Abner Louima,
sexually assaulted
with broomstick in
police precinct
• Brooklyn, New York
Case emblematic of overzealous
use of force
• 1999
• Amadou Diallo,
unarmed, shot 41
times
• Bronx, New York
Ignites protest of “stand your
ground” law
• 2012
• Trayvon Martin, 17
years old, shot on
walk home from
candy purchase
• Sanford, Florida
#BlackLivesMatter movement
• 2013
• Acquittal of Trayvon
Martin’s killer led to
founding of movement
• Organize & build local
power to intervene in
violence inflicted on
Black communities by
state & vigilantes
“I can’t breathe”
• 2014
• Eric Garner, unarmed,
selling cigarettes
• Staten Island, New
York
Body left on ground for hours,
widespread outcry
• 2014
• Michael Brown,
unarmed 18 year old,
• Ferguson, Missouri
An especially young victim
• 2014
• Tamir Rice, age 12,
had a toy gun, shot
dead in seconds
• Cleveland, Ohio
A death in custody
• 2015
• Sandra Bland,
commits suicide after
arrest for minor traffic
stop, police
misconduct
acknowledged
• Waller County, Texas
#SayHerName
• 2015-2016
• Hashtag campaign,
report, Ted talk
(African American Policy
Forum, 2020 & Center for
Intersectionality & Social
Policy Studies, 2020)
Use of livestreaming to
document abuse
• 2016
• Philando Castile,
complying with police
during traffic stop,
shot dead with baby,
partner in car
Outcry over no-knock warrants
• 2020
• Breonna Taylor, shot
8 times in her bed
• Louisville, Kentucky
A critical convergence
• 2020
• George Floyd killed in
Minneapolis,
Minnesota
An over-representation
• 2020
• Tony McDade,
transgender man
• Tallahassee, Florida
Transgender people over-
represented
• 3.7x more likely to
experience police
violence
• 7x more likely to
experience physical
violence from police vs.
cisgender victims
(Anti-Violence Project,
2013)
Transgender people over-
represented
• BIPOC transgender
people 6x more likely
to experience
physical violence from
police vs. White
cisgender victims
(Anti-Violence Project,
2013)
No recognition of disability
• Intersection with
disability
• Ruderman Family
Foundation report on
disability & police
violence
• 30-50% of people killed
by police are disabled
Measuring police brutality
• Measurement a challenge due to
underreporting (ACLU, 2020)
• Citizen complaint rates often reflect
underreporting
• Historically:
– Low SES most at risk
– 13.6% citizen encounters resulted in
complaints of abuse (Police Services Study,
1982)
Measuring police brutality
• Recommendations from ACLU are to
focus on:
– Police shootings/firearms discharge
– Use of physical force
– Understanding official policies
– Counting lawsuits
Measuring police brutality: What
we do know
MappingPoliceViolence.org
Measuring police brutality: What
we do know
MappingPoliceViolence.org
Measuring police brutality: What
we do know
MappingPoliceViolence.org
Causes of police brutality
• 2 competing theories re: lethal force in
literature
• Threat hypothesis: Explained by racism &
influence on interpersonal interaction (Jacobs &
Obrien,1998)
• Community violence hypothesis: Direct
response to higher rates of violent crime in
Black communities (Smith, 2004)
Causes of police brutality
• Traditional arguments focus on implicit
bias & “a few bad apples” (Mock, 2018)
• Newer research identifies structural racism
at state policy level (Mesic, Franklin, Cansever, Sharma,
Knopov & Seigel, 2018)
– 5 state racism index factors considered
– Correlation between level of state racism &
rate of unarmed Black people killed by police
– Data support aspects of both theories
Responses to police brutality
with limited to no success
• Use of implicit bias training inconclusive so
far (Maron, 2016)
• Diversifying police forces not very
successful (Cobbina, 2020)
• Body cameras have almost no effect on
behavior (Yokum, Ravishankar & Coppock, 2017)
Responses to police brutality
with promise
• Restrictions on use of chokeholds,
shooting at moving vehicles (Use of force Project,
2020)
• Preparing officers to support people with
mental illness with robust training (Calahan,
2020)
• Demilitarization of local police forces
(Delehanty, Mewhirter, Welch & Wilks, 2017)
Other suggested responses to
police brutality
• Re-negotiating police union contracts to
increase officer accountability (Bokat-Lindell, 2020)
• Eliminating “qualified immunity” for civilian
deaths (Brown, 2020)
• Initiating a truth & reconciliation process
about police abuses (Bokat-Lindell, 2020)
Other suggested responses to
police brutality
• Hiring more police officers (Bokat-Lindell, 2020)
• De-funding police departments (Ray, 2020)
• Hiring social workers to replace many police
functions in existing police structures (Singer,
2020)
• *Not* hiring social workers for work in police
departments as it will not change underlying
oppressive culture (Vakharia, 2020)
Discussion questions
1. How is police brutality a form of structural
racism?
2. How can social workers best respond to the
problem of police brutality at micro, mezzo
and macro levels?
3. Are there alternative conflict & dispute
resolution systems that we can foster to
avoid police involvement in “hot situations?”
Action steps:
• Educate yourself about how police
brutality gets made (Brooks, 2020)
– BIPOC: Tend to racial trauma, foster resiliency
– White people: Don’t ignore problem because
you can
• Speak up about what’s happening in your
community (Hao, 2020)
• Consider investing in positive community
supports & programs (Davis, 2016)
Action steps:
• Learn trauma-informed practices for work
with youth in urban communities due to
over-exposure (Geller, Fagan, Tyler & Link, 2014)
• Participate in anti-racism work in your
organization! (Kendi, 2019)
• Engage in anti-racism work on *yourself* &
spread the message! (Saad, 2020)
Contact information:
• Elspeth Slayter, MSW, PhD
• Professor
• School of Social Work
• Salem State University
• eslayter@salemstate.edu
• CC BY-NC-SA

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#SWEduActs teach-in on police brutality as a form of police brutality

  • 1. #SWEduActs Teach-In Police brutality as a form of structural racism Elspeth Slayter, MSW, PhD School of Social Work Salem State University
  • 2. Learning objectives 1. Define police brutality 2. Explore history of police brutality as a form of structural racism 3. Discuss prevalence 4. Consider causes 5. Review responses 6. Action steps
  • 3. Definition • “Police brutality” is used to refer to various human rights violations by police • Includes beatings, racial abuse, unlawful killings, torture, or indiscriminate use of riot control agents at protests (Amnesty International, 2020)
  • 4. Why social workers need to focus on police brutality: • Experience of police brutality is traumatic, life-altering & sometimes lethal • Police actions are, arguably, state sanctioned forms of social control that impact our communities • Circa 18,000 law enforcement agencies in U.S. (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2016)
  • 5. We’ve all heard the long list of names…
  • 6. …but this is not new… Smithsonian Museum Collection, 2020
  • 7. Origins of U.S. police force • 1704: First formal slave patrol created in colonies, roots of current police system • Focus: Preservation of slavery • Reconstruction: Sheriffs functioned enforced segregation & disenfranchisement of freed slaves (Waxman, 2017)
  • 8. BIPOC an early target of police • 1838: 1st police department in Boston • Communities most targeted by harsh tactics: Recent European immigrants • As Black people fled horrors of Jim Crow south, they too became victims (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 9. Police work always racialized • 1929: Chicago • Police killings: 30% Black people • Black people constituted only 5% of population • Racialized focus of police work (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 10. Problems with police noted • 1931-32 • National Commission on Law Observance & Enforcement • Commissioned a report on “Lawlessness in Law Enforcement” (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 11. Violence in policing pervasive • 1960s: Civil Rights Era • Aggressive dispersion tactics • Pervasive violent policing in communities of color every day (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 12. Violence in policing pervasive • 1965 • Congressman John Lewis in Selma, Alabama • “Bloody Sunday” (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 13. The power of video emerges • 1991 • Beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles, CA, 50+ times • Use of amateur video allowed world to witness (Nodjimbadem, 2020)
  • 14. Case causes widespread outcry • 1997 • Abner Louima, sexually assaulted with broomstick in police precinct • Brooklyn, New York
  • 15. Case emblematic of overzealous use of force • 1999 • Amadou Diallo, unarmed, shot 41 times • Bronx, New York
  • 16. Ignites protest of “stand your ground” law • 2012 • Trayvon Martin, 17 years old, shot on walk home from candy purchase • Sanford, Florida
  • 17. #BlackLivesMatter movement • 2013 • Acquittal of Trayvon Martin’s killer led to founding of movement • Organize & build local power to intervene in violence inflicted on Black communities by state & vigilantes
  • 18. “I can’t breathe” • 2014 • Eric Garner, unarmed, selling cigarettes • Staten Island, New York
  • 19. Body left on ground for hours, widespread outcry • 2014 • Michael Brown, unarmed 18 year old, • Ferguson, Missouri
  • 20. An especially young victim • 2014 • Tamir Rice, age 12, had a toy gun, shot dead in seconds • Cleveland, Ohio
  • 21. A death in custody • 2015 • Sandra Bland, commits suicide after arrest for minor traffic stop, police misconduct acknowledged • Waller County, Texas
  • 22. #SayHerName • 2015-2016 • Hashtag campaign, report, Ted talk (African American Policy Forum, 2020 & Center for Intersectionality & Social Policy Studies, 2020)
  • 23. Use of livestreaming to document abuse • 2016 • Philando Castile, complying with police during traffic stop, shot dead with baby, partner in car
  • 24. Outcry over no-knock warrants • 2020 • Breonna Taylor, shot 8 times in her bed • Louisville, Kentucky
  • 25. A critical convergence • 2020 • George Floyd killed in Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • 26. An over-representation • 2020 • Tony McDade, transgender man • Tallahassee, Florida
  • 27. Transgender people over- represented • 3.7x more likely to experience police violence • 7x more likely to experience physical violence from police vs. cisgender victims (Anti-Violence Project, 2013)
  • 28. Transgender people over- represented • BIPOC transgender people 6x more likely to experience physical violence from police vs. White cisgender victims (Anti-Violence Project, 2013)
  • 29. No recognition of disability • Intersection with disability • Ruderman Family Foundation report on disability & police violence • 30-50% of people killed by police are disabled
  • 30. Measuring police brutality • Measurement a challenge due to underreporting (ACLU, 2020) • Citizen complaint rates often reflect underreporting • Historically: – Low SES most at risk – 13.6% citizen encounters resulted in complaints of abuse (Police Services Study, 1982)
  • 31. Measuring police brutality • Recommendations from ACLU are to focus on: – Police shootings/firearms discharge – Use of physical force – Understanding official policies – Counting lawsuits
  • 32. Measuring police brutality: What we do know MappingPoliceViolence.org
  • 33. Measuring police brutality: What we do know MappingPoliceViolence.org
  • 34. Measuring police brutality: What we do know MappingPoliceViolence.org
  • 35. Causes of police brutality • 2 competing theories re: lethal force in literature • Threat hypothesis: Explained by racism & influence on interpersonal interaction (Jacobs & Obrien,1998) • Community violence hypothesis: Direct response to higher rates of violent crime in Black communities (Smith, 2004)
  • 36. Causes of police brutality • Traditional arguments focus on implicit bias & “a few bad apples” (Mock, 2018) • Newer research identifies structural racism at state policy level (Mesic, Franklin, Cansever, Sharma, Knopov & Seigel, 2018) – 5 state racism index factors considered – Correlation between level of state racism & rate of unarmed Black people killed by police – Data support aspects of both theories
  • 37. Responses to police brutality with limited to no success • Use of implicit bias training inconclusive so far (Maron, 2016) • Diversifying police forces not very successful (Cobbina, 2020) • Body cameras have almost no effect on behavior (Yokum, Ravishankar & Coppock, 2017)
  • 38. Responses to police brutality with promise • Restrictions on use of chokeholds, shooting at moving vehicles (Use of force Project, 2020) • Preparing officers to support people with mental illness with robust training (Calahan, 2020) • Demilitarization of local police forces (Delehanty, Mewhirter, Welch & Wilks, 2017)
  • 39. Other suggested responses to police brutality • Re-negotiating police union contracts to increase officer accountability (Bokat-Lindell, 2020) • Eliminating “qualified immunity” for civilian deaths (Brown, 2020) • Initiating a truth & reconciliation process about police abuses (Bokat-Lindell, 2020)
  • 40. Other suggested responses to police brutality • Hiring more police officers (Bokat-Lindell, 2020) • De-funding police departments (Ray, 2020) • Hiring social workers to replace many police functions in existing police structures (Singer, 2020) • *Not* hiring social workers for work in police departments as it will not change underlying oppressive culture (Vakharia, 2020)
  • 41. Discussion questions 1. How is police brutality a form of structural racism? 2. How can social workers best respond to the problem of police brutality at micro, mezzo and macro levels? 3. Are there alternative conflict & dispute resolution systems that we can foster to avoid police involvement in “hot situations?”
  • 42. Action steps: • Educate yourself about how police brutality gets made (Brooks, 2020) – BIPOC: Tend to racial trauma, foster resiliency – White people: Don’t ignore problem because you can • Speak up about what’s happening in your community (Hao, 2020) • Consider investing in positive community supports & programs (Davis, 2016)
  • 43. Action steps: • Learn trauma-informed practices for work with youth in urban communities due to over-exposure (Geller, Fagan, Tyler & Link, 2014) • Participate in anti-racism work in your organization! (Kendi, 2019) • Engage in anti-racism work on *yourself* & spread the message! (Saad, 2020)
  • 44.
  • 45. Contact information: • Elspeth Slayter, MSW, PhD • Professor • School of Social Work • Salem State University • eslayter@salemstate.edu • CC BY-NC-SA

Editor's Notes

  1. Welcome to the #SWEduActs teach-in on police brutality as a form of structural racism. A teach-in is a general educational forum on any complicated issue, usually an issue involving current political affairs. The main difference between a teach-in and a seminar is the refusal to limit the discussion to a specific time frame or a strict academic scope. We are a group of social work educators from around the United States who came together to amplify how police brutality and structural racism are addressed in the curricula within our Schools of Social Work. I am dedicating this talk to a Black male social work professor colleague who has experienced the ills of what police brutality can do to a community because I want social work students to know that police brutality touches our community too. And it is important to note that all Black male social work faculty are not immune depending on their social histories and social locations. He wanted me to emphasize to you that the social work response to police brutality should be as real and as serious as the brutality itself, so let us keep that in mind as we learn today. It is our ethical responsibility to empower ourselves to be on the frontline of addressing police brutality and being courageous in confronting structural racism.
  2. Law enforcement in the United States is made up of about 18,000 federal, state, county, and local agencies.
  3. Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi
  4. A Vigil in Memory of Black Women and Girls Killed by the Police. For the first time, family members of Black women killed by police came together from across the country for a powerful vigil designed to draw attention to their loved ones' stories. The family members of Alberta Spruill, Rekia Boyd, Shantel Davis, Shelly Frey, Kayla Moore, Kyam Livingston, Miriam Carey, Michelle Cusseaux, and Tanisha Anderson were present and supported by hundreds of attendees, activists, and stakeholders.
  5. EMT
  6. No required tracking of disability in police violence or police killings