This project focuses on how routine practices of policing maintain racial residential segregation, one of the central mechanisms of American racial inequality. It illustrates six ways that American policing perpetuates residential segregation, drawing from qualitative research in several American cities. Finally, the project engages a fundamental question that emerges in the context of racial justice movements today: Is an anti-segregation approach to policing possible in a society that is structured through race?
Title:
How Policing Reinforces Racial Segregation In The 21st Century
How Policing Reinforces Racial Segregation In The 21st Century
Date/Time:
Wednesday, March 10, 2021 - 5:00pm - 6:00pm
Wednesday, March 10, 2021 - 5:00pm - 6:00pm
Speaker:
Monica Bell is an Associate Professor of Law at Yale Law School and an Associate Professor of Sociology at Yale University. Her areas of expertise include criminal justice, welfare law, housing, race and the law, qualitative research methods, and law and sociology.
Credit:
1.0 credit hours
By:
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law / Cleveland State University
More Information and Registration
Monica Bell is an Associate Professor of Law at Yale Law School and an Associate Professor of Sociology at Yale University. Her areas of expertise include criminal justice, welfare law, housing, race and the law, qualitative research methods, and law and sociology.
Credit:
1.0 credit hours
By:
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law / Cleveland State University
More Information and Registration
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