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Citations Needed

Episode 208: How US Media Repackages Pro-Police Policies as "Reform"

Citations Needed

Citations Needed

Bias, News, Media, Society & Culture, Journalism, Criticism, Politics

4.84K Ratings

🗓️ 25 September 2024

⏱️ 81 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Citizens to Aid Police in New Program,” reported the Los Angeles Times in 1975. “Community Policing: Law Enforcement Returns to Its Roots,” declared the Chicago Tribune in 1994. “Obama Calls for Changes in Policing After Task Force Report,” announced The New York Times in 2015.

Periodically, US officials propose some type of police “reform,” usually after a period of widespread protest against ongoing racist police violence. Police, we’re told, will improve their own performance and relationships with the public with a few tweaks: better training on use-of-force and equipment, upgraded technology like body cameras and shooting simulators, and deeper integration into the “community.”

But, every time a new “reform” is introduced, it almost always serves as justification for bigger police-department budgets and fawning media coverage over police, painting the image of a scrappy force for public safety that just doesn’t have the right training and resources. Meanwhile, levels of police harassment and police violence remain the same, and, in many cases, even increase. Indeed, 2023 was the worst year for fatal police shootings in decades despite – or perhaps because of – all the post-Ferguson “reforms."

On this episode, the Season 8 Premiere of Citations Needed, we’ll discuss the media-enabled phenomenon of how pro-police narratives, programs and budget bloating busy work are spun as “reform,” how they are used to stem public anger and placate squishy politicians and nonprofits, and look at the decades-old practice of turning public opposition to, and victimization from, US policing into an opportunity to expand and enrich the security state.

Our guest is civil rights attorney Alec Karakatsanis.

**

Alec Karakatsanis (@equalityAlec) is a civil rights attorney and the founder of Civil Rights Corps. He is the author of Alec’s Copaganda Newsletter, the book Usual Cruelty: The Complicity of Lawyers in the Criminal Injustice System (The New Press, 2019), the Yale Journal of Law & Liberation study “The Body Camera: The Language of our Dreams,” and the forthcoming book, Copaganda: How Police and the Media Manipulate Our News, which will be published early next year by The New Press.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is citations needed with Nema Shirazzi and Adam Johnson.

0:08.0

Welcome to citations needed, a podcast on the media, power, PR, and the history of bullshit.

0:15.0

I am Nemo Shirazzi.

0:16.0

I'm Adam Johnson.

0:18.0

This is the premiere episode of season 8 of citations needed.

0:22.0

We are back from our end of summer break.

0:24.8

Thank you all for joining us again.

0:26.2

Of course, you can follow the show on Twitter at citations spot,

0:28.9

Facebook, citations needed, and become a supporter of the show if you are so inclined and we do hope that you are so inclined because we are 100%

0:36.8

listener funded. We don't run ads or commercials. We have no corporate sponsors or anything like that.

0:42.3

We are able to do the show because of the generosity

0:45.0

and ongoing support of listeners like you.

0:47.4

Yeah, if you listen to the show and you like it, please do support it.

0:50.9

If you've always thought about it, but I I haven't done it and you're kind of sitting

0:53.1

around listening to it reach for that wallet why don't you grease me off of Jackson maybe

0:57.2

Lincoln maybe a Benjamin let's get this done Citizens to aid police in new program, reported the Los Angeles Times back in

1:11.8

1975.

1:14.0

Community policing, law enforcement returns to its roots, declared the Chicago Tribune

1:19.7

in 1994.

1:21.5

Obama calls for changes in policing after task 1994. throughout the decades, U.S. officials propose some type of quote-unquote police reform, usually

1:34.8

after a period of widespread protests against ongoing racist police violence.

1:39.2

Police were told will improve their own performance in relationship with the public with a few tweaks, better training on use of force and equipment,

...

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