My Brother's Keeper Alliance

First Steps: Police Accountability and Reforms

Reimagining Policing: Police Accountability and Reforms
As the first of an ongoing workshop series to engage community leaders to address police violence, MBK Alliance Executive Director Michael Smith joined President and CEO of the Leadership Conference and The Education Fund Vanita Gupta, Co-founder and CEO
Reimagining Policing Workshop Series
This virtual workshop, the first of a three-part series hosted in partnership with Cities United and the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, provided educational tools and analysis on the spectrum of policing and public safety options, alternative public safety models, and community-centered review processes.
Panelists
Ronald L. Davis, Executive Director
President Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing
Phillip Atiba Goff, PhD, Co-founder and CEO
Center for Policing Equity, John Jay College
Vanita Gupta, President and CEO
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Changa Higgins, Dallas Policing Campaign Manager
Leadership Conference Education Fund
Lynda Garcia, Moderator and Policing Campaign Director
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
“You can have all the best policies on the books, but policy culture eats policy for lunch. And so without training at the front end and accountability at the back end, none of these policies will make a difference.”
—Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

“There's still structural racism in law enforcement. It’s not an indictment on your officers; it’s an indictment on a system of which they're operating. That truth is very critical to moving forward.”
—Ronald L. Davis, former executive director of President Obama's Task Force on 21st Century Policing

“Make sure that in responding to the passions of your community, that you understand that the community deserves a plan.”
—Phillip Atiba Goff, PhD, co-founder and CEO of the Center for Policing Equity

“You have to have a community-driven, community-created plan that says what happens next, says how those funds will be allocated, that has real teeth with the community.”
—Changa Higgins, Dallas Policing Campaign Manager at the Leadership Conference Education Fund

Related Resources
These links are being provided as a convenience and for educational and informational purposes only; they do not constitute an endorsement or an approval by the Obama Foundation, and the Obama Foundation bears no responsibility for the accuracy or legality of the content of the external site or subsequent links from an external site.
New Era of Public Safety: A Guide to Fair, Safe, and Effective Community Policing (The Leadership Conference Education Fund) (Opens in a new tab)
A Roadmap for Exploring New Models of Funding Public Safety (Center for Policing Equity) (Opens in a new tab)
How Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Conducts Pattern-or-Practice Investigations (U.S. Department of Justice) (Opens in a new tab)
Community Policing Dispatch August 2016: Police Reform vs. Policing Reform (U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services) (Opens in a new tab)
Guiding Principles on Use of Force (Police Executive Research Forum) (Opens in a new tab)
Police shootings database 2015-2020 (The Washington Post) (Opens in a new tab)

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