About the Course:
Racial profiling is not solely traced to flashpoint incidents involving illegal search, seizure, and arrest. It is a pattern and practice of generational behaviors by a few law enforcement officers who choose to execute duties not based on probable cause, but their actual or perceived bias of individuals or a targeted community. A mindset cloaking itself “under the color of law” to provoke or incite a person to resist lawful or unlawful enforcement actions.
Gain an in-depth understanding by examining the roots of racial profiling from the colonial period of slave patrols to the modern era. Three provocative and articulate courses empowering the reader with thought leadership on next steps to eradicate racial profiling
Course Objectives:
- Analyze historical issues dealing with race relations and the law enforcement profession.
- Relate constitutional rights and common sense actions to minimize interactions with law enforcement officers from escalating into a negative event.
- Implement the content of this course into academic studies, term papers, and projects focused on criminal justice accountability and reform in the twenty-first century.
Special Note: The Instructor reserves the right to randomly choose objectives for the four-hour lecture or panel discussion.
Who should attend:
- Command Staff
- Managers
- Supervisors
- Instructors
- Field Training Officers
- Line Staff
Maximum Number of Students: 40
What to bring:
Laptop or Mobile Device
Georgia POST Credit Hours:
- 4 hours for lecture or panel discussion.
- 7 hours for workshop
What will I recieve:
- Continental Breakfast (Lecture and Workshop)
- Catered Lunch (Workshop only)
- Color Student Manual
- Certificate of Completion
- Ticket for prize giveaways