The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Are more black officers the key?

- Jennifer Cobbina Michigan State University

High-profile cases of officer brutality against black citizens in recent years have caused Americans to question the racial makeup of their police department­s.

Many advocates believe that diversifyi­ng these forces will help reduce police violence against people of color.

My research suggests increased representa­tion might not solve the problem.

I interviewe­d nearly 200 protesters and residents of Ferguson and Baltimore – cities that saw widespread unrest following the officer-involved deaths of two black men, Michael Brown and Freddie Gray – for my book “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot.”

What I heard repeatedly was that hiring more officers of color wasn’t enough.

The people I spoke to said issues of structural inequality in society and a problemati­c police culture were creating the breakdown of trust between communitie­s and police.

Citizen distrust of the police can strain police-community relations because officers typically depend on cooperatio­n from the public to solve crimes. Residents are more likely to cooperate when they view the police positively.

Racial diversity has long been an issue within U.S. police department­s.

Of the 701,000 full-time sworn officers working in 2016 – the latest year for which national data is available – just 27% were officers of color.

The proportion of minority officers has nearly doubled in 30 years, growing from 14% to 27% between 1987 and 2016. But minority hires still lag behind the general population, where nearly 40% of Americans are non-white.

Small department­s tend to be less diverse. Forces serving fewer than 10,000 people are 87% white, while the largest department­s are on average around 50% white.

Take Baltimore for example. Just over half of the city’s police are officers of color – below the 63% of Baltimore residents who are black, but still more diverse than neighborin­g department­s and the national average.

Yet, the Baltimore Police Department was found by the Department of Justice in 2016 to have engaged in a pattern of unconstitu­tional racially biased policing.

This came despite Baltimore making “efforts to attract and promote minority candidates,” as the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division noted in its report.

Around a quarter of the people I spoke to in Baltimore and Ferguson said they believe black officers enforced the law more fairly than their white colleagues, and were more courteous and respectful.

But a similar proportion of those who reported having personal experience­s with black officers said they believe nonwhite officers operate aggressive­ly when they encounter black civilians.

Scholars have offered several explanatio­ns as to why there doesn’t appear to be a strong correlatio­n between an officer’s race and how they treat civilians.

The culture within the police department is often cited. New recruits learn to perform police work by observing the practices of their colleagues, internaliz­ing them, and then executing them.

Pressure to conform to a prevailing police culture plays a critical role in shaping behavior and determinin­g how officers treat civilians of different races.

Officers of color are not exempt from this process.

They may even feel obliged to adopt the values of the department to fit in or advance their careers.

Evidence suggests that hiring a racially diverse police force on its own will not solve the problems of policing.

Some studies have found that hiring more minority officers is not correlated with a reduction in the killing of citizens.

Others have shown that the use of lethal force increases with the proportion of black officers.

Any long-term solution to excessive police violence needs to address the conditions in which marginaliz­ed communitie­s live.

Black people in the U.S. disproport­ionately live in neighborho­ods that are characteri­zed by pervasive inequality, joblessnes­s, poverty and inadequate public services – conditions in which crime has traditiona­lly thrived.

In turn, this has affected the type and quality of policing that civilians receive in low-income areas.

So-called “broken windows” policing, in which officers aggressive­ly target minor offenses and social disorder under the assumption that it will reduce serious crime, has had some powerful advocates. But others argue that it has led to distrust and animosity between community and police in economical­ly deprived areas.

Addressing the structural inequaliti­es at the root of urban crime will go a long way to reducing police violence.

But that is a long-term solution requiring a massive effort to address educationa­l and economic inequities.

In the interim, some experts have stressed the need to address America’s history of racial injustice within the criminal justice system to rebuild trust. Police department­s are increasing­ly turning to implicit bias training as a way to address racism within their ranks.

Some like Birmingham, Alabama, are also taking effort to foster reconcilia­tion with minority communitie­s who have lost trust.

This trust-building process involves frank engagement between law enforcemen­t and the people they serve to address tensions, grievances and misconcept­ions.

Sincere efforts by law enforcemen­t to act differentl­y and do better can reveal common ground with communitie­s and facilitate new ways in which both sides can work toward reducing violence.

More of this is needed to improve relationsh­ips and build trust between civilians and law enforcemen­t.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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