Community policing models tend to divide communities, not protect them.
, published by The New Press and reprinted here with permission. Copyright © 2020 by Maya Schenwar and Victoria Law.
For Malik, a Black twenty-five-year-old community organizer born and raised in East New York, an almost entirely Black and Latinx neighborhood in Brooklyn, the police definition of “community” doesn’t include people like him. The police make an effort to pull older residents, not people his age, into their neighborhood meetings. The police stoke older residents’ fears about gangs, violence, and crime, worsening the neighborhood’s generation gap and pushing them to align with the cops.
The “listening tour” was not atypical of Chicago’s community policing efforts.
It goes beyond social media threats. Chicago’s “Albany Park Neighbors” group, located in one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in the United States, often focuses on businesses that are accused of bringing in “outsiders,” particularly people of color, homeless people, and people who appear to have substance addictions.
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