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Science Friday

Proactive Policing, The Social Brain. June 12, 2020, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 12 June 2020

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the 1980s and 1990s, in the midst of rising crime rates and a nationally waning confidence in policing, law enforcement around the country adopted a different approach to addressing crime. Instead of just reacting to crime when it happened, officers decided they’d try to prevent it from happening in the first place, employing things like “hot spots” policing and “stop and frisk,” or “terry stops.” The strategy is what criminologists call proactive policing, and it’s now become widely used in police departments across the nation, especially in cities. Critics and experts debate how effective these tactics are in lowering crime rates. While there’s some evidence that proactive policing does reduce crime, now public health researchers are questioning if the practice—which sometimes results in innocent people being stopped, searched, and detained—comes with other unintended physical and mental health consequences. Samuel Walker, emeritus professor of criminology at the University of Nebraska Omaha and an expert in police accountability, reviews what led police departments to adopt a more proactive approach, while medical sociologist Alyasah Ali Sewell explains the physical and mental health impacts of stop-question-and-frisk policing. Over the past few months, people’s social lives have transformed. We’re now told to stay home, and when we do go out, to maintain at least six feet between ourselves and others—forget about a handshake or a hug. Many are now isolated in their homes, with just a screen and its two-dimensional images to keep them company. But our brains are wired for social connections. “We’re social primates,” says psychiatrist Julie Holland. “It’s in the job description.”  Holland’s new book, Good Chemistry: The Science of Connection, from Soul to Psychedelics, looks at what happens to the brain’s chemistry when we connect socially, and how devastating disconnections can be. She joins Ira to talk about the social life of the brain, community, and the mental health impact of the stressful times we’re living in.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Last week, authorities charged the four former police officers involved in the death of George Floyd,

0:06.8

one officer with an upgraded charge of second-degree murder, and the three others with aiding and abetting murder.

0:13.0

Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators have gathered in protests across the country

0:17.4

in response to the deaths of Floyd and other black Americans, the

0:21.7

demonstrations have called for an examination of policing practices. One strategy used by departments

0:27.6

is called proactive policing, including stop and frisk, and it's meant to stop crime before it

0:34.7

happens. Experts have debated the effectiveness of this tactic, but public health researchers are

0:40.3

investigating the health implications, the physical and mental impacts these tactics may have

0:46.3

on the community.

0:47.7

These ideas were discussed in a conversation we had last fall with Sam Walker, Professor Emeritus

0:53.6

in the School of Criminology

0:55.0

and Criminal Justice at the University of Omaha and Nebraska, and Aliasa Ali Sewell,

1:01.2

Associate Professor of Sociology at Emory University. I began by asking Sam Walker to define for

1:08.3

us the term proactive policing. What does it mean to police proactively?

1:14.8

Well, contacts between the police and citizens fall into two categories. Proactive actions are where

1:20.5

the police initiate the contact. The other category, the majority of them, are reactive. That's

1:26.5

where somebody calls 911 or they flag down a police car and the police react to that.

1:31.9

And so you have written about the history of proactive policing.

1:35.9

Tell us how this sort of policing came to be.

1:39.0

Well, the police always did reactive policing, excuse me, proactive policing,

1:43.8

where they would initiate

1:44.9

some kind of contact. But I think there was a real shift in the late 70s and 1980s, where

...

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