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De-policing: Difference between revisions

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===Articles=== ===Articles===
by Walter E. Williams. by Walter E. Williams.

by Nicholas Stix.


by Alex Tizon and Reid Forgrave. by Alex Tizon and Reid Forgrave.

Revision as of 09:55, 17 November 2006

De-policing is a "law enforcement strategy in which police avoid accusations of racial profiling by ignoring traffic violations and other petty crimes committed by members of visible minorities." 1 In a sense de-policing is the opposite of racial profiling.

External links

Articles

Riot ideology and de-policing by Walter E. Williams.

De-Policing in America's Cities: Erasing the "Thin Blue Line" by Nicholas Stix.

What Goes Around Comes Around by Alex Tizon and Reid Forgrave.

L.A.'s Budding Mogadishus by Constance L. Rice.

Racial profiling is confirmed by Bill Dedman.

'De-policing' may be the response to racial profiling study by J.R. Labbe.

Television

NIGHTLINE: AMERICA IN BLACK & WHITE: DE-POLICING: 07/23/2001

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