Thursday, July 30, 2009

Racial Profiling



What is racial profiling?Racial profiling is usually defined in a law enforcement context. One study published in the Canadian Review of Policing Research defined it as "a racial disparity in police stop and search practices, customs searches at airports and border-crossings, in police patrols in minority neighbourhoods and in undercover activities or sting operations which target particular ethnic groups."
The Ontario Human Rights Commission took a broader approach, defining it as "any action undertaken for reasons of safety, security or public protection that relies on stereotypes about race, colour, ethnicity, ancestry, religion, or place of origin rather than on reasonable suspicion, to single out an individual for greater scrutiny or different treatment."
Racial profiling is usually defined in a law enforcement context.The OHRC gives some non-police-related examples of what it considers racial profiling:
School officials suspend a Latino child for violating the school's zero tolerance policy while a white child's behaviour is excused as being normal child's play.
An employer insists on stricter security clearance for a Muslim employee after the Sept. 11 attacks.
A bar refuses to serve aboriginal customers because of a belief they will get drunk and rowdy.Accusations of differential treatment arise in areas where authorities can exercise their discretion. If police stopped every car, or if customs officers directed everyone for follow-up scrutiny, there would be no talk of racial profiling. But when that discretion is exercised, members of many minority groups feel that they come out with the short end of the baton – that they somehow always have to prove their innocence.

Have you ever been a victiam of racial profiling. Were you sure it was racial profiling? What happen? How did it go down? How did you resolve the issue?

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