26-VI, Brussel.les, seminari, ´Ethnic Profiling: Recognizing the Problem and Developing Solutions´

Ethnic Profiling: Recognizing the Problem and Developing Solutions
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Event Date(s): June 26, 2009
Event Time: 9:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Contacts:
Anni-Isabelle von Lingen
osi-brussels@osi-eu.org
+32.2.505.46.46
 
Tarana Ahmadova (logistics)
assistant@osi-eu.org

Ethnic profiling by police across Europe—a common and longstanding practice—has intensified in recent years in response to concerns about terrorism. Evidence from countries across the European Union shows that police routinely use generalizations about ethnicity, religion, race, or national origin in deciding who to target for identity checks, stops, and searches.

Minorities and immigrant communities have reported discriminatory treatment by the police. From massive data-mining operations to intimidating identity checks, ethnic profiling is often more of a public relations stunt than a real response to crime.

There is no evidence that ethnic profiling actually prevents terrorism or lowers crime rates and increasing evidence that ethnic profiling is counter-productive insofar as it misdirects law enforcement resources and alienates some of the very persons whose cooperation is necessary for effective crime detection.

This seminar will explore the meaning of ethnic profiling and the challenges and benefits of documenting and addressing the problem.

Speakers

Interventions from Belgian community groups, academics, and police officers will reflect on how ethnic profiling manifests in Belgium and initiatives to address it.

Register

Click here to register (mandatory) by June 23, 2009.

Location

La Maison du Textile
Rue Montoyer 24
B-1000 Brussels

 

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Related Information

Ethnic Profiling in the European Union: Pervasive, Ineffective, and Discriminatory
May 2009
Pervasive use of ethnic and religious stereotypes by law enforcement across Europe is harming efforts to combat crime and terrorism, according to this report released by the Open Society Justice Initiative.

 

Addressing Ethnic Profiling by Police
May 2009
This Open Society Justice Initiative book reports on strategies for improving police-community relations by increasing the fairness, effectiveness, and accountability of police stops in Bulgaria, Hungary, and Spain.