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Tactical Perception PJ3: The Science of Justice

This training aims to increase public trust and enhance officers' ability to achieve personal and professional goals by understanding the factors that impact human decision making and addressing biases and stereotypes. It covers the concepts of procedural justice, neutrality, race, and implicit bias.

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Tactical Perception PJ3: The Science of Justice

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  1. TacticalPerception PJ3: The Science ofJustice

  2. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 2 Housekeeping Please silence your cellphones Restrooms Agenda – breaks &lunch Have an openmind! This is a judgment-free zone. Everyone has something tooffer What is said in this room stays in thisroom

  3. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 3 Objectives • Make law enforcement and communitiessafer • Increase public trust and legitimacy of law enforcement • Enhance officers’ ability to achieve our personal and professionalgoals • Use evidence-based policing to achieve all of the above

  4. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 4 IAT

  5. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 5 Whyareweheretoday? - You have a voice.-

  6. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 6 MODULE 1:Introduction

  7. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 7 • Sowhat? • Our brains take shortcuts to read the Cambridgepassage • What other shortcuts does ittake? • What does this have to do with ourjobs? • Our brains usually get itright • These responses can be helpful (Fire = Hot= Do NotTouch) • Sometimes our brains don’t get it right and we fall into atraps • Those traps put us atrisk • How we respond in a trap put us atrisk • (Domestic Victim = Female = NotThreatening) • Add departmental stats here (e.g. #officers injured by female assailants thisyear)

  8. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 8 • HowdoesthisrelatetoPJ1&2? • Give people a voice(listen) • Neutrality (befair) • Respectful treatment (berespectful) • Trustworthiness comes from a fair and transparentprocess • Explain the reason for the decision(s) oraction(s)

  9. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 9 ✰ Peter, Paul, and Mary sing ✰ Comedianstell ✰ If you have no money, youare ✰ Wire in a wheel, isa ✰ What comes out of a litcigarette? ✰ White part of an egg isthe

  10. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 10 This training isabout... Awareness of the factors that go into human decision making, and how we can make better choices when we are conscious of the biases and stereotypes that exist in theworld.

  11. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 11 This training is not aboutyour character. We all have biases that affect our perception Many aresubconscious Some may be contrary to our self-image This is the fact of the humanbrain

  12. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 12 • SituationsMatter • You’re late for work.Why? • Reality: your alarm went off and you hit snooze 5 times, you went through the Starbucks and the line was long, you forgot your gym bag and had to go back home to grabit • What you tell your supervisor: car trouble, traffic, parking,kids…… • WHY? Reality is- people liewhen... • They havemotivation • The consequences will beslight • They believe they’ll get away withit • Who does this?EVERYONE

  13. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 13 Values What are yourvalues? What if something happened that made you act inconsistently with yourvalues? Would you want to changethat? Situations matter more thancharacter. They matter so much that they can make you behave in ways that are inconsistent with who you think you are (e.g. being late to work). How can behavioral sciencehelp?

  14. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 14 TrapsDefined Traps are situations that trigger mental reactions which influence behaviors. (IdentityTrap) These behaviors are unrelated to the nature of one’s character or consciousintentions Identity traps are divided into fast traps and slow traps.

  15. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 15 BREAK Myth: It’s a waste of time to try to mitigate my implicit biases. They don’t impact anyoneanyway. Busted: Implicit biases have huge implications; thus it is important to identify your own biases and then actively engage in de-biasing techniques to addressthem.

  16. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 16 MODULE 2: FastTraps Shortcuts in theBrain Fast Traps:Over-reliance on implicitbiases

  17. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 17 • SubconsciousConclusions • Think of branding: Can you name thesebrands? • Were you born knowing this? If not, how did you learn?

  18. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 18 • ImplicitAssociation • A cognitive link between two concepts that is automatic. • When one concept is primed (made salient), the other becomes more accessible, without conscious deliberation. • For example, if I say “bread” to you, youprobably automatically think of“butter.

  19. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 19 Implicit AssociationTest

  20. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 20 • ImplicitBias • Some implicit associations relate to social groups, such as race orgender. • When these associations are relatively positiveor negative toward different groups, they constitute bias.

  21. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 21 ObservationGame Pilot Nurse Judge CEO FlightAttendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  22. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 22 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  23. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 23 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  24. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 24 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  25. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 25 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  26. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 26 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  27. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 27 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  28. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 28 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  29. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 29 Pilot Nurse CEO Teacher Flight Attendant Doctor Librarian Lawyer

  30. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 30 Evaluation

  31. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 31 Permeation ofStereotypes

  32. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 32 Black/CrimeAssociation

  33. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 33 JenniferEberhardt: How deeply rooted biases affect how police enforce the law.

  34. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 34 • “I’m a minority, so noneof this applies tome.” • Everyone develops implicit associations about others based on characteristics like race, skin tone, income, sex and other physicalattributes • Biases are learned; we start learning them from the time we areborn • All of the things we see and hear contribute to thesebiases • We probably aren’t aware of most of what we are absorbing

  35. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 35 BREAK Myth: Implicit Bias is nothing more than beliefs people choose not to tell others. They hide their realbelief. Busted: Implicit biases are activated involuntarily and beyond our awareness or control. Implicit bias is concerned with unconscious cognition that influences understanding, actions, anddecisions…….

  36. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 36 HistoricalContextforFastTraps “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people… We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about thedrugs? Of coursewedid.” - John D. Ehrlichman, Nixon’s domestic policy chief, in Dan Baum, “Legalize It,” in Harper Magazine, (April2016)

  37. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 37 • Stereotypes – ideas or associations/ overgeneralizations that connect group membership and traits about thatgroup • Prejudice- the belief that a stereotype or overgeneralization is true and/or you have a strong feeling about a particulargroup • Discrimination- the behavior, acting in line with the stereotype or prejudice; differential treatment based on group membership that isobjectionable

  38. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 38 • Stereotypes are justtrue. • Stereotypes – ideas or associations/overgeneralizations that connect group membership and traits about thatgroup • There is usually historical context behindstereotypes • Asian American students being smarter is just true. • Historical context e.g model minority and selectiveimmigrations • Exceptions

  39. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 39 Stereotype “Stereotyping is normal human cognition. Police arenormalhumans.Sopolicestereotype.Policing is not a normal job - it’s a particularly taxing positionsotheycannotmakethesameerrorsthe rest of uscan.” JackGlaser

  40. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 40 Canprejudiceeverbeagoodthing?

  41. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias Stereotypes Behavior Stereotype Idea 41 FAST Prejudice TRAP Belief Discrimination Behavior

  42. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 42 • Ultimate AttributionError • Tendency to place undue emphasis on internal characteristics to explain out group member’s bad behavior rather than the situationalfactor • Example: I’m patrol, member mgmt does not greet me in the hall bc they are evil pencilpushers • We are more likely to give situational causes for in-group members’ negativebehavior • Example: I’m patrol and fellow patrol officer does notgreetme in the hall bc they had a long hard day, preoccupied with personalstuff • The opposite is true for positivebehavior • Example: I’m patrol, fellow patrol greets me bc they are good and honorable and respectfulhumans

  43. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 43 What isracism? Racism is a system of distributing power that privileges one/some racial groupings overothers. Calling someone a racist is an indictment of their character and an acknowledgment of systemicdiscrimination

  44. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 44 • Situations: Where arethey? • Difficult to see the role ofsituations • Situations are often invisible e.g. outside pressures, time constraints,etc. • Example: The Alex TrebekEffect

  45. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 45 • Situationsthatcreatefasttraps: • Situations that can lead to an over-reliance on implicit biases such as: • Being mentallytaxed • Being in a badmood • Feeling threatened • Being anovice • Making quickdecisions • Multitasking

  46. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 46 • Small Group Exercise: Examples of Fast Traps1 • Come up with an example of your ownof a fast trap that is: healthy/positive either universal or police • what situations make thesetraps? • what implicit associations are atplay? • how could you avoidthis?

  47. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 47 BREAK Myth: I am black; I can’t have bias against blackpeople. Busted: Researchers have discovered that many Americans, regardless of race, display a pro-White/anti-Black bias on the IAT. This occurs because implicit biases are robust and pervasive affecting allindividuals

  48. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 48 Fast TrapGame

  49. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 49 • Small Group Exercise: Examples of Fast Traps2 • Comeupwithanexampleofyourownofafast trap that is: negative/funny-universal • what situations make thesetraps? • what implicit associations are atplay? • how could you avoidthis?

  50. Procedural Justice and PoliceLegitimacy Understanding Neutrality, Race and ImplicitBias 50 Watch these judges fall into atrap.

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