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TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stopIMPLICIT BIAS
Implicit Bias. Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups. Under certain conditions, those automatic associations can influence behavior—making people respond in biased ways even when they are not explicitly prejudiced. More than thirty years of researchin
STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” POLICE PERSPECTIVES HOW TO INCREASE CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING This project was supported by cooperative agreement number 2013-CKWX-K007 awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stopIMPLICIT BIAS
Implicit Bias. Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups. Under certain conditions, those automatic associations can influence behavior—making people respond in biased ways even when they are not explicitly prejudiced. More than thirty years of researchin
STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” POLICE PERSPECTIVES HOW TO INCREASE CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING This project was supported by cooperative agreement number 2013-CKWX-K007 awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice.IN THE NEWS
In this op-ed for The Hill, two Pittsburgh Bureau of Police officers involved with the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice explain why they feel it's important for police to understand the history of race in America (and how police departments are perceived by marginalized communities).PILOT SITES
Pilot Sites. The National Initiative will combine existing and newly developed interventions informed by implicit bias, procedural justice, and reconciliation in six pilot sites around the country. RESEARCH | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Research. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.PROCEDURAL JUSTICE
Procedural justice focuses on the way police and other legal authorities interact with the public, and how the characteristics of those interactions shape the public’s views of the police, their willingness to obey the law, and actual crime rates.FORT WORTH, TEXAS
Fort Worth, Texas. Fort Worth, Texas, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA Minneapolis, Minnesota, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Minneapolis was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational Initiative
PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational Initiative
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
Birmingham, Alabama, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stopIMPLICIT BIAS
Implicit Bias. Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups. Under certain conditions, those automatic associations can influence behavior—making people respond in biased ways even when they are not explicitly prejudiced. More than thirty years of researchin
STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” POLICE PERSPECTIVES HOW TO INCREASE CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING This project was supported by cooperative agreement number 2013-CKWX-K007 awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stopIMPLICIT BIAS
Implicit Bias. Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups. Under certain conditions, those automatic associations can influence behavior—making people respond in biased ways even when they are not explicitly prejudiced. More than thirty years of researchin
STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” POLICE PERSPECTIVES HOW TO INCREASE CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING This project was supported by cooperative agreement number 2013-CKWX-K007 awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice.IN THE NEWS
In this op-ed for The Hill, two Pittsburgh Bureau of Police officers involved with the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice explain why they feel it's important for police to understand the history of race in America (and how police departments are perceived by marginalized communities).PILOT SITES
Pilot Sites. The National Initiative will combine existing and newly developed interventions informed by implicit bias, procedural justice, and reconciliation in six pilot sites around the country. RESEARCH | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Research. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.PROCEDURAL JUSTICE
Procedural justice focuses on the way police and other legal authorities interact with the public, and how the characteristics of those interactions shape the public’s views of the police, their willingness to obey the law, and actual crime rates.FORT WORTH, TEXAS
Fort Worth, Texas. Fort Worth, Texas, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA Minneapolis, Minnesota, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Minneapolis was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational Initiative
PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in theNational Initiative
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
Birmingham, Alabama, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. The city was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stop HOW TO SERVE DIVERSE COMMUNITIES The Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, in partnership with the Vera Institute of Justice and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, has released a series of guidebooks intended to serve as a tool for all levels of law enforcement. This is one in a series of three guides, all of which can be found in the A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
FACILITATOR GUIDE
Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ1) Credits 2 Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy Facilitator Guide Prepared by the Instructional Design and Quality Control Section A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stop HOW TO SERVE DIVERSE COMMUNITIES The Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, in partnership with the Vera Institute of Justice and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, has released a series of guidebooks intended to serve as a tool for all levels of law enforcement. This is one in a series of three guides, all of which can be found in the A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
FACILITATOR GUIDE
Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ1) Credits 2 Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy Facilitator Guide Prepared by the Instructional Design and Quality Control Section A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class. RESEARCH | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Research. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Mission. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is a project to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system and advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships. In September 2014, the U.S. Department of Justiceannounced
INTERVENTIONS
Interventions. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice will highlight three areas that hold great promise for concrete, rapid progress: implicit bias,RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
NATIONAL INITIATIVE ASSISTS PITTSBURGH AND MINNEAPOLIS IN National Initiative Assists Pittsburgh and Minneapolis in Building Police-Community Trust. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, one of six cities of the National Initiative, has proven particularly successful in its work with the Youth-Police Advisory Committee (PGHYPAC), an organization co-founded by Chief Cameron McLay of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police and students from the University of Pittsburgh PROCEDURAL JUSTICE TRAINING KICKOFF IN SIX PILOT SITES The Department of Justice’s National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice has announced that on February 1, 2016 it will launch a three-day procedural justice training in its six pilot sites, a component of its plan to strengthen the relationship between the criminal justice system and the communities it serves and protects. The pilot sites sent officers to receive training on STRENGTHENING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LAW ENFORCEMENT AND Strengthenin elationshi etwee a nforcemen n ommunitie olo . Developing n genda or ction. 1. Background. COPS Office Director Ronald Davis. On April 4, 2014, the Office of COMMUNITY-ORIENTED TRUST AND JUSTICE BRIEFS: IMPLICIT BIAS TST STIC BIS C O M M N I T Y O R I E N T E D trustandjustice.org IMPLICIT BIAS Implicit bias describes the automatic associations individuals . make between groups of people and stereotypes about NATIONAL INITIATIVE FOR BUILDING COMMUNITY TRUST AND The National Initiative for Building Community Trust (National Initiative) is a three-year project that is funded by the Department of Justice designed to improve the relationship between HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stop HOW TO SERVE DIVERSE COMMUNITIES The Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, in partnership with the Vera Institute of Justice and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, has released a series of guidebooks intended to serve as a tool for all levels of law enforcement. This is one in a series of three guides, all of which can be found in the A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
WILLIAM J. BRATTON REMARKS AT NOBLE FRIDAY, MARCH 13 William J. Bratton Remarks at NOBLE Friday, March 13, Atlanta, GA. On March 13, at the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement (NOBLE) William R. Bracey CEO Symposium, New York Police Department Commissioner Bill Bratton delivered a powerful message about the state of policing in New York City and across the nation. A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class. HOME | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to RESOURCES | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Resources. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation. MISSION | NATIONAL INITIATIVE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between communities and the criminal justice system. It also aims to advance the public and scholarly understandings of the issues contributing to those relationships.RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND PRETEXTUAL STOPS One focus of procedural justice is how police act when they engage with the community, but why they engage could matter even more. Jonathan Blanks, writing in the Case Western Reserve Law Review, argues that certain types of legal police engagement, no matter how friendly or polite, may still undermine procedural justice. Blanks explains this concept through the example of the pretextual stop HOW TO SERVE DIVERSE COMMUNITIES The Department of Justice's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, in partnership with the Vera Institute of Justice and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, has released a series of guidebooks intended to serve as a tool for all levels of law enforcement. This is one in a series of three guides, all of which can be found in the A JUDGE IN NEWARK TAKES AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO Procedural justice, one of the key pillars of the National Initiative, has been in the spotlight recently thanks to coverage of Judge Victoria Pratt’s court in Newark, New Jersey.Pratt, the chief judge of the Newark Municipal Court, is the featured profile in Tina Rosenberg’s long read at the Guardian on “the simple idea that could transform US criminal justice.” STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA Stockton, California, is one of six pilot sites employing strategies, examining policies, and developing evidence through research to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote racial reconciliation. Stockton was selected as a pilot site for its demonstrated willingness and capacity to engage in the NationalInitiative’s
WILLIAM J. BRATTON REMARKS AT NOBLE FRIDAY, MARCH 13 William J. Bratton Remarks at NOBLE Friday, March 13, Atlanta, GA. On March 13, at the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement (NOBLE) William R. Bracey CEO Symposium, New York Police Department Commissioner Bill Bratton delivered a powerful message about the state of policing in New York City and across the nation. A TACTICAL MINDSET: PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND POLICE Introduction A Tactical Mindset: Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ2) 6 Lesson to Introduction The instructor should introduce him/herself to the class.PILOT SITES
Pilot Sites. The National Initiative will combine existing and newly developed interventions informed by implicit bias, procedural justice, and reconciliation in six pilot sites around the country. RESEARCH | NATIONAL INITIATIVE Research. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.TOOLS & GUIDES
Tools & Guides. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice maintains this website as an information clearinghouse to provide the latest research, tools and guides, best practices, and a wide variety of other resources to communities and law enforcement agencies interested in engaging in processes to reduce implicit bias, enhance procedural justice, and promote reconciliation.INTERVENTIONS
Interventions. The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice will highlight three areas that hold great promise for concrete, rapid progress: implicit bias,RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships. Respect, collaboration, and effective working relationships between police and the communitiesthey serve
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE TRAINING KICKOFF IN SIX PILOT SITES The Department of Justice’s National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice has announced that on February 1, 2016 it will launch a three-day procedural justice training in its six pilot sites, a component of its plan to strengthen the relationship between the criminal justice system and the communities it serves and protects. The pilot sites sent officers to receive training onFACILITATOR GUIDE
Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy (PJ1) Credits 2 Procedural Justice and Police Legitimacy Facilitator Guide Prepared by the Instructional Design and Quality Control Section POLICE PERSPECTIVES HOW TO INCREASE CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING This project was supported by cooperative agreement number 2013-CKWX-K007 awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice. STRENGTHENING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LAW ENFORCEMENT AND Strengthenin elationshi etwee a nforcemen n ommunitie olo . Developing n genda or ction. 1. Background. COPS Office Director Ronald Davis. On April 4, 2014, the Office of COMMUNITY-ORIENTED TRUST AND JUSTICE BRIEFS: IMPLICIT BIAS TST STIC BIS C O M M N I T Y O R I E N T E D trustandjustice.org IMPLICIT BIAS Implicit bias describes the automatic associations individuals . make between groups of people and stereotypes about* About
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NATIONAL INITIATIVE FOR BUILDING COMMUNITY TRUST AND JUSTICE The National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice is designed to improve relationships and increase trust between minority communities and the criminal justice system.SPOTLIGHT
THE NATIONAL INITIATIVE FOR BUILDING COMMUNITY TRUST AND JUSTICE CONCLUDED ON MARCH 31, 2019. You can read the Urban Institute’s evaluation of the project here You can follow the partner organizations and police departments involved as they continue to move the work forward: National Network for Safe Communities Center For Policing EquityUrban Institute
Yale Justice Collaboratory Birmingham Police Department Fort Worth Police Department Gary Police Department Minneapolis Police Department Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Stockton Police DepartmentRead More
IN THE NEWS
Pittsburgh police chief, officers meet with community in trust-building effort - _PittsburghPost-Gazette_
Case Study: Community Input On Unmanned Aerial Systems (Drones), Stockton Police Department-
_NI_
Minneapolis Police Chief hopes new department position creates better community relations - _Fox_ Birmingham mayor names police chief after 5 month search- _AL.com_
Opinion: A Better Solution for Starbucks - _The New York Times_ Minneapolis PD Says Use Of Force Dropped By Half In Last Decade- _CBS_
Berkeley police stops show racial disparities — but what does thatmean?
- _Berkeleyside_
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INTERVENTIONS
IMPLICIT BIAS
Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups.Read More
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE
Procedural justice focuses on the way police and other legal authorities interact with the public, and how the characteristics of those interactions shape the public’s views of the police, their willingness to obey the law, and actual crime rates.Read More
RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and resetrelationships.
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MORE INFORMATION ABOUT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE For more information about technical assistance through the National Initiative, please submit requests to the Office of Justice (OJP) Programs Diagnostic Center. The OJP Diagnostic Center is a technical assistance resource designed to help state, city, county and tribal policymakers and community leaders use data to make decisions about criminal justice programming. The Diagnostic Center invests in what works by bridging the gap between data and criminal justice policy at the state, local and tribal levels. Diagnostic Center engagements are intended to build community capacity to use data to make short-and long-term evidence-based decisions about criminal justice and publicsafety.
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PILOT SITES
STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTAGARY, INDIANA
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
LEADERSHIP
This Web site is funded in part through a grant from the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor any of its components operate, control, are responsible for, or necessarily endorse, this Web site (including, without limitation, its content, technical infrastructure, and policies, and any services or tools provided). SUBSCRIBE TO THE NATIONAL INITIATIVE MAILING LISTEmail Address
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