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Diversity in the Police Force
Simulation for Use in Youth and Adult Education
Complete Manual with Role Cards and Guidelines for Facilitators
by Emmanuella Asabor, Moritz Decker, Eva Degler, Tamara Demydenko,
Alissa Escarce and Amanda Shelton
- last updated 2014 -
Developed by: In cooperation with: Supported by: This simulation is a collaborative work in progress. It was developed and by Humanity in Action during an international workshop in 2012 and has been tested and reviewed several time since then.
Are you interested in using the simulation? Feel free to contact us. Contact: Humanity in Action Deutschland e. V. Kollwitzstr. 94-96, 10435 Berlin Tel.: +49 (0)30 443082-71 E-Mail: [email protected] For most recent updates and other simulation manuals please check: www.humanityinaction.org/knowledgebase/list/article_type-teaching_tool
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Diversity in the Police Force Simulation for Use in Youth and Adult Education
Table of contents
1. Guidelines for Simulation Facilitators 3
1.1 Introduction 3
1.2 Learning Objectives 4
1.2.1 Knowledge 4
1.2.2 Soft Skills 4
1.3 Material 4
1.4 List of Stakeholders 5
1.5 Procedure / Timeline 6
2. Information for All Participants 8
2.1 Scenario 8
2.2 Background Information 9
2.2.1 International Human Rights Law 9
2.2.2 Methods of Addressing Diversity in the Workplace 10
3. Information for Individual Participants (Role Cards) 12
3.1 Moderator/City Council 12
3.2 Cinnamon City Police Headquarters 15
3.3 Police Union 17
3.4 Minority Police Officers Association 19
3.5 Organization for Minority Rights 21
3.6 Citizens for Safe Communities 23
3.7 Collective Against Police Brutality 25
4. Debriefing 27
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1. Guidelines for Simulation Facilitators
1.1 Introduction
This is a negotiation-based game that addresses a fictitious scenario. Cinnamon
City is located in Zamarand Country. The town has been facing problems with
racial discrimination. This was highlighted by the release of two recent studies
pointing to racial profiling by police officers and discriminatory hiring practices
towards visible minorities within the police department. Six months ago, the
situation became even heated when a non-minority police officer in Cinnamon
City was videofilmed beating a minority youth after arresting him for vandalizing
a store. While all of the relevant legal and disciplinary issues have been
addressed, the city council is ready to consider long-term reform to avoid similar
problems in the future.
Although the setting is fictitious, the game contains information regarding the
very real problems of racial profiling in law enforcement, and of unequal access to
employment. It prompts participants to think about different approaches
communities might choose to increase diversity and promote intercultural
understanding amongst public servants. The game also refers to the international
human rights framework that prohibits racial discrimination and calls on states to
promote understanding between the majority populations and minority groups.
Please note that the term “minority” is intentionally left undefined, in order to
maximize adaptability to different contexts. We encourage game facilitators to
use some time during the debriefing to discuss how the game applies to the
demographic situation in the players’ respective communities.
The scenario contains footnotes with references to additional sources. These
sources are not mandatory. However, if participants review the scenario
individually and with internet access prior to playing the game, these sources
might be helpful.
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1.2 Learning Objectives
1.2.1 Knowledge
● Develop an understanding of different perspectives on the value of diversity to
the public sector and employment;
● Explore approaches to promoting diversity, including cultural competence in
the workplace, so called “blind applications”, minority recruitment, and
enforcement of quotas.
1.2.2 Soft Skills
● Develop negotiation skills;
● Demonstrate the complexity of the political decision-making process,
● Build coalitions through compromise;
● Promote the ability to empathize with positions that may differ from one’s own
point of view;
● Provide an introduction to various methods of legitimizing an argument,
including the use of rhetoric, anecdotal proof, and statistical evidence.
1.3 Material
This manual consists of four components:
1. Guidelines for simulation facilitators;
2. General information for all participants, i. e. the simulation scenario and
background information;
3. Information for individual participants (role cards);
4. Guidelines for a debriefing session.
It is important to distinguish between three different roles of participants, only
two of which are involved in actually playing the game:
• Facilitators
The facilitators act as game instructors (ideally, 2 people). They do not receive
role cards, do not represent an interest group and have no stake in the
activities involved. The facilitators take a leading role in the introduction and
the debriefing phase.
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• Stakeholders
The material for the stakeholders consists of 7 role cards for up to 27
participants. One could play with fewer participants (minimum of 8). However,
discussing arguments and strategies in a number of small teams (representing
the stakeholder groups) considerably improves the quality of the simulation
game.
• Moderator(s) in the Game
One of the stakeholder groups acts as moderator of the negotiations. In the
case of this game, the moderators are representing the City Council. The
material for the moderator consists of one role card for a group of up to 3
participants.
However, this moderating role should not be confused with that of the
simulation facilitators. The moderators are part of the game.
Since this position is crucial to maintaining a fruitful discussion and an orderly
voting process, the moderators should behave proactively and be quick
decision-makers. Because of these requirements, this is the only role card for
which the facilitator should ask for volunteers or assign the role card to
participants they deem apt for the task.
1.4 List of Stakeholders
The participants of the simulation game will be assigned to play a member of one
of the following groups:
1. Moderator(s): City Council (1 to 3 characters)
2. Police Department Headquarters (1 to 4 characters)
3. Citizens for Safe Communities (1 to 4 characters)
4. Collective Against Police Brutality (1 to 4 characters)
5. Police Officers Union (2 to 4 characters)
6. Minority Police Officers’ Association (1 to 4 characters)
7. Organization for Minority Rights (1 to 4 characters)
Note: Each role card includes 1 to 4 defined character descriptions. Several
characters can be doubled, and some can be discarded if a small group is playing
the game. If characters are discarded, it should be the ones towards the end of
the lists in each role profile. Extra players can also play nameless members of
their organization.
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1.5 Procedure / Timeline
The overall duration of the game is between 2h 50 min and 3h 45 min. If you need to shorten the game, try to cut back at each level of the game equally. Resist the temptation to cut back on the debriefing as it is an important part of the whole experience.
1. Introduction to the game: 10 min. Facilitators will briefly introduce the game, the expectations and the ground
rules. Facilitators will also distribute role cards at this time. These roles should be assigned randomly (except for the moderator role card), as by drawing slips of paper from a hat, so that people sitting next to each other are not consistently in the same group.
2. Reading and planning within each group: 20 min. Here, all of the stakeholder groups represented will have time to read the
descriptions of their role and begin strategizing amongst themselves. Each group needs to agree on a position they can share in the plenary.
3. The game starts: First plenary round and Q&A: 25 min Here, all stakeholder groups will present their positions and priorities in a
plenary session moderated by the City Council. The moderators will devise a mechanism to allow each group to speak in turn to briefly share its position, with time reserved at the end for clarifying questions from groups about other groups' core positions.
4. Informal negotiations and drafting proposals: 35 min. During this time, the groups will craft policy proposals based on their
respective positions, or sets of groups may form coalitions based on shared interests and devise a policy proposal together. At the end of this part of the game, each group must be represented in one of the proposals that the moderators collect.
5. Second plenary round and presentation of proposals: 15 - 25 min. During this time, individual groups or coalitions of groups present and explain
their proposed solutions to the entire assembled plenary. The City Council will moderate the presentations.
6. Informal negotiations: 25 – 30 min. During this period, groups and/or coalitions will meet informally again to edit
proposals or to combine proposals. This is the stage when groups negotiate in order to have the best chance of seeing a proposal passed that represents their interests.
7. Voting: 10 – 20 min. The City Council will chair the voting period, and it is their responsibility to
allocate time accordingly. A 2/3 voting majority of groups is necessary for a proposal to pass.
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8. Debriefing: 30 - 60 min. During this period, participants will discuss their experiences playing the
game and what they learned. Sample questions are provided in this packet to help the facilitator guide the discussion. Time allotted for the debriefing session can vary depending on how much time the group has left to commit to the game, and can be completed in as little as 30 (not ideal) to 60 minutes.
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2. Information for all Participants
2.1 Scenario
The fictional community of Cinnamon City has seen changes in the past few
years. The number of minority residents living in Cinnamon City has increased
significantly in the last decade, making race and ethnicity a hot topic of
conversation among concerned citizens. Focusing on this topic, a major
independent research institution released a report last month containing statistics
showing that the Cinnamon City police are 69% more likely to stop a minority
driver than a non-minority driver, and that the police search minority residents
approximately twice as often as they search non-minority Cinnamon City
residents.1 A second report indicated that the number of minority police officers in
the Cinnamon City police department is at an all-time low despite the fact that
diversity in the general city population has been steadily increasing.
Despite an initial series of news stories aired about minority issues in Cinnamon
City after the two reports were released, the issue seemed to die down until six
months ago, when a non-minority police officer was videofilmed beating a
minority youth and insulting him verbally after the youth was caught vandalizing
a store. The video went viral in social media, with hundreds of thousands of hits.
Multiple citizens assert that if long-term reform had been seriously entertained
when the results of those studies were released, the incident may have been
avoided. Some feel that getting more minority police officers on the force could
help address this problem. Other community members, concerned with rising
crime in the city, are wary of change during such a precarious time.
The local City Council hopes to counteract the negative media coverage that the
beating incident has received over the past six months in an effort to draw new
residents and businesses to the city. The City Council has consulted with the
police force about different ways to address the problem while preserving the
quality of policing and resident safety. Now, it is convening a town hall meeting
for different community groups to come together. The aim is to decide what long-
term reforms the police department should implement.
1 These statistics are based on real figures from 2010, for the state of Missouri in the United States. The first statistic showed that black motorists were 69% more likely to be stopped than white motorists. To obtain our second statistic, reflecting the search rate, we averaged two statistics contained in the Missouri report: that black motorists were 1.86 times more likely to be searched than white motorists, and that Hispanic motorists were 2.13 times more likely to be searched than white motorists. See Executive Summary for 2010 Missouri Vehicle Stops, available at the Office of the Missouri Attorney General website at http://ago.mo.gov/VehicleStops/2010/
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One group of participants will act as the City Council. They will moderate the town
hall meeting. The other stakeholder groups will create proposals to address the
problem, which will be voted upon to select one proposal at the end of the game.
To be adopted, a proposal must garner 2/3 of the votes, with each group getting
one vote. The City Council, as Moderator, does not vote but ensures a fair
dialogue and voting procedure.
2.2 Background Information
2.2.1 International Human Rights Law
This game incorporates two distinct but related subjects:
1) Racial profiling as a form of racial discrimination, and
2) Promotion of diversity in public employment.
The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination is a United Nations convention which was enforced in 1969. The
convention addresses these issues head-on, defining racial discrimination as “any
distinction, exclusion, restriction, or preference based on race, colour, descent, or
national or ethnic origin which has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing
the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural, or any other
field of public life.”2
Article 2 of the Convention requires that state parties “condemn racial
discrimination” and commit to taking action to end the phenomenon, as well as
“promoting understanding among all races.”3 Specifically, it requires that “each
state party undertake to encourage, where appropriate, integrationist multiracial
organizations and movements and other means of eliminating barriers between
races, and to discourage anything which tends to strengthen racial division.”4
Article 5 notes that state parties are to ensure that individuals are free of
discrimination from authorities in enjoying their rights to personal security and
safety, as well as employment.5 Finally, state parties to the Convention can—but
do not have to—submit a declaration under Article 14 allowing individuals or 2 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, opened for signature Mar. 7, 1966, 660 U.N.T.S. page 212 (No 9464), available at http://treaties.un.org/doc/publication/UNTS/Volume%20660/v660.pdf. 3 see above 4 see above 5 see above
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groups within its borders to file claims against the state for violations, which are
submitted to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.6
2.2.2 Methods of Addressing Diversity in the Workplace
Institutions concerned with diversity and equal opportunity for minorities have
spent decades debating the most appropriate methods for correcting minority
under-representation in diverse settings. Universities, workplaces, and
governments have formulated a range of solutions.7
AWARENESS RAISING AND TRAINING
One solution revolves around education and specific training. Such measures can
include providing interviewers with explicit instructions not to discriminate against
minority applicants. Such “cultural competence” training encourages the ability to
understand and effectively interact with members of different cultural
communities, by creating awareness of one’s own cultural position, attitude and
knowledge towards other cultures, and developing intercultural communication
skills.8
BLIND APPLICATIONS
So called blind applications represent another potential solution. These vary
greatly in their scope and rigorousness. Here, only a few possibilities will be
presented. The application process may consist of removing specific personal
information (address, birth date, photograph, social or religious affiliations, etc.)
from application materials during the first round of reviews. As most
discrimination occurs during this early phase, that measure alone can remove
obstacles for minority applicants.9
In later stages, person-to-person interactions between applicant and interviewer,
such as telephone interviews, can be avoided. Studies have shown that blind
6 see above 7 This debate has been very active in the United States since the 1960s. http://www.oeod.uci.edu/aa.html; see also the more recent debate in Brazil. http://chronicle.com/article/At-Brazils-Universities/123720/ 8 An example of one organization doing this kind of work: http://lunajimenezseminars.com/about-us/how-we-can-help/ 9 In 2010, a study by the University of Konstanz in Germany found that applicants with a Turkish surname had a significantly lower likelihood of a callback for a job interview thank those with a German sounding surname 8all other qualifications being equal): http://ftp.iza.org/dp4741.pdf
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applications result in new hires that are both more highly qualified, and more
likely to be from a minority group.10
QUOTAS
Quotas are yet another potential solution. Advocates for a quota system argue
that equality for minorities cannot be achieved simply by allowing them to
compete without discrimination. Their logic is that, given the history of injustices
against minorities, application processes cannot be made truly fair by eliminating
employers’ prejudices alone.11 Rather, institutions must give preference to
minorities, who often lack the resources and social capital necessary to develop
competitive applicant profiles. Some advocates suggest that institutions reserve a
few spots specifically for minorities each time they hire, while others believe that
a workplace will only truly be just when majority-minority ratios in the workplace
mirror those in the community at large (i.e., if 20% of the larger community is
from a specific minority group, 20% of the employer’s workforce should be from
that minority group).12
RECRUITMENT
Actively encouraging minorities to apply for positions within the public sector is
another way to promote diversity. This can involve placing posters in
neighborhoods where many minorities live, establishing recruitment offices
especially for minorities, or calling for applications in different languages.
Note: These options are not mutually exclusive, which means that they can be
adapted and/or combined. Other solutions not discussed here may exist as well.13
10 Based on research by Germany’s Anti-Discrimination Agency. http://www.antidiskriminierungsstelle.de/EN/Projects/AnonymApplication/DepersonalisedApplication_node.html. Additionally, an example regarding the benefits of blind orchestra auditions for female musicians: http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/A94/90/73G00/ 11 A real-world example: quotas for university admissions in Brazil. http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/03/29/brazils-racial-identity-challenge/quotas-are-working-in-brazil 12 The debate on women’s quota also offers interesting insights. For the state of affairs in Germany, please see: http://www.alumniportal-deutschland.org/en/jobs-career/article/women-in-leadership-positions-womens-quota.html 13 For a comprehensive manual on how to combat police injustice and promote reform, see American Civil Liberties Union, Fighting Police Abuse (1997), available at http://www.aclu.org/racial-justice_prisoners-rights_drug-law-reform_immigrants-rights/fighting-police-abuse-community-ac - gather
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3. Information for Individual Participants (Role Cards)
3.1 Moderator/City Council
City Council Members:
Major and up to 2 additional characters
Who are you?
The City Council is the lawmaking body that governs Cinnamon City. It is
comprised of elected officials, who represent the interests of the people of the city
through democratic decision-making. The Council consists of the Mayor, who is
the chairperson, and up to 2 additional elected representatives.
What is your task?
Complete Impartiality
You serve as the chairperson of the City Council. Your priority is the continuous
safety and prosperity of Cinnamon City. You are 100% impartial and neutral
towards the stakeholder groups, which is why the Council is interested in hearing
all positions. Your job is to make sure all voices are heard so that the final
proposal represents the best solution for Cinnamon City. You are truly interested
in learning from all your community members.
Maintaining Order
The goal of the meeting is to produce a proposal that will be implemented by the
police department. You are responsible for developing a mechanism to ensure
that the stakeholders speak in turn, in a regulated fashion. It is your job to make
sure the discussions, especially those of the entire plenary, are neither derailed
by irrelevant issues nor dominated by outspoken individuals. You will drive the
discussion toward a solution created by the various groups.
Time Management
Your responsibilities include keeping time. Depending on how much time is
dedicated to the whole play, you need to adjust the playing time in each of the
sections specified below. You will have discretion over how much time to allocate
for people’s speeches, voting, Q&A, etc., so it is important for you to remain
attuned to the changing dynamics of the discussion.
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Voting procedure
Here, your role as a supervisor and facilitator becomes highly important. You
must come up with a procedure that gives every group enough time to present
their proposal. Also, you must make sure that groups vote unanimously, as there
is only one vote per group.
A general piece of advice
It is at your discretion to decide when discussions and informal negotiations are
reaching an impasse. Be flexible, and allocate remaining time to other parts of
the game if necessary.
Your Schedule for Town Hall Meeting
Please adjust the time to your schedule for the day and the total time allocated
for the simulation.
Your role starts with calling people into the first plenary round. At all stages of the
meeting, you need to keep track of time.
Please note that you might want to determine the seating arrangement around
the table. It might influence the dynamics of the meeting.
1. First plenary round and Q&A: 25 min
Here, all of the groups will present their positions and priorities in a plenary
session. You moderate the meeting. You will propose a mechanism to allow
each group to speak in its turn to briefly share its position, with time
reserved at the end for clarifying questions from groups about other groups'
core positions.
2. Informal negotiations and drafting proposals: 35 min.
During this time, the groups will craft policy proposals based on their
respective position, or sets of groups may form coalitions based on shared
interest and devise a policy proposal together. At the end of this part of the
game, every group must be represented in one of the proposals that the
moderators collect. You need to remind the groups of the time and call them
back into session.
3. Second plenary round and presentation of proposals: 15 - 25 min.
During this time, individual groups or coalitions of groups present and explain
their proposed solutions to the entire assembled plenary. You moderate the
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presentations and keep track of the time. Please monitor the interactions
around the table, sometimes discussants need to be called to order to retain
a favorable atmosphere for dialogue.
4. Informal negotiations: 25 – 30 min.
During this period, groups and/or coalitions will meet informally again to edit
or combine proposals. This is the stage when groups negotiate in order to
have the best chance of seeing a proposal passed that will represent their
interests.
5. Voting: 10 - 20 min.
By now, the groups should come forward with concrete proposals. You
monitor the voting procedure. A 2/3 voting majority of groups is necessary
for a proposal to pass.
You need to remind the groups of the time and call them back into session. You ask all groups to present the final proposals, and you chair the voting rocedure. You need to allocate time accordingly.
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3.2 Cinnamon City Police Headquarters
Who are you?
Founded in 1885, the police department of Cinnamon City is one of the nation’s
oldest police forces. Its mission is to protect the safety and security of the city in
accordance with the constitution of Zamarand. It seeks to promote peace and
civility amongst the citizens of Cinnamon City through diligent law enforcement.
What is your position?
The police headquarters’ answer to the recent studies suggesting problems with
Cinnamon City’s response to increasing diversity is a broad set of responses. The
department’s primary concern is the peace and security of the city. Its priority is
to maintain the strongest and best qualified police force possible. Of course, this
force should also be responsive to the needs of a diverse community, but not at
the expense of the objective quality of the police officers. With the increasing
crime statistics over the past 10 years, quality officers are of critical importance.
● Education and increased on-the-job training about diversity issues is the most
natural response. It is also a good faith measure, which demonstrates to the
community that the force is making sure all officers can respond to a diverse
community. This type of sensitivity is not just the responsibility of minority
police officers; Cinnamon City officers are police for all citizens.
● More active recruitment of minorities is a top priority for the police
headquarters. The police department hopes that minority-specific
advertisements will increase the pool of minority applicants without
compromising admission standards.
● The headquarters are open to the idea of blind applications, particularly blind
CVs, since studies suggest they actually increase the quality of the recruitment
with simple, easy-to-implement steps.
● The police department is weary of a hiring system based upon a strict quota.
Such a quota risks compromising the quality of the police force, and would
make diversity the most important outcome rather than effectiveness and
safety.
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Individual characters
Chief of Police: You are an established non-minority male professional in your
mid 40s. You are very open-minded and non-discriminatory in your day-to-day
life. However, you are skeptical of strict quotas and artificial attempts at creating
diversity, having been disappointed with the quality of individuals recruited in
such a way in the past. You see potential in blind CVs, but insist that in-person
interviews are crucial to recruitment of fully-qualified police officers. You have a
soft spot for the work of the Organization of Minority Rights, and really appreciate
their efforts.
Deputy Chief of Police: You are a woman in your late 30s, and belong to an
ethnic minority. You come from a low-income family background, and worked
very hard to develop your career. You do not see merit in a quota system. You
developed a successful career without taking advantage of any special slots
reserved for minorities. You feel that good officers can be successful without such
measures. You are, however, very excited about blind CVs and their potential to
remove racial/ethnic bias from the application system. You are even open to
considering measures to remove bias from other parts of that process, including
the interview.
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3.3 Police Union
Who are you?
The Union consists of working police who fight for the interests of police
personnel in government and public debates. Its charter outlines its mission as
“instilling loyalty and allegiance to the City; enforcing law and order; encouraging
fraternal, educational, charitable and social activities among officers; advocating
for uniform application of a merit system; improving the working conditions of the
law enforcement profession; creating and maintaining a tradition of esprit de
corps; and cultivating a spirit of helpfulness and confidence among members and
the people we serve.”
As ethical and responsible public servants, you were upset by the wide circulation
of the video depicting a white policeman beating a minority youth. You were also
bothered by the buzz created by the two studies, which seemed to suggest that
the city police force is a racist institution. You believe that the left-wing
establishment—professors, journalists, lawyers—look for occasional irresponsible
actions by rare unethical policemen and blow them way out of proportion,
creating sensations that will promote their own cushy careers. You see the
incident depicted in the video as an anomaly, and believe that the police
department’s traditional system of discipline would have been more than
adequate to deal with the policeman in question. You are a little annoyed that this
video might cause a major disruption in the department’s respectable, traditional
way of doing things.
What is your position?
● You are strongly against quotas. You believe that the police force’s traditional
system for hiring and promotion, which is purely merit-based, is the fairest
option available. In your opinion, quotas will not end discrimination, they are
discrimination. Quota systems are racist measures against hard-working,
honest people who happen to be white. The police force is not a racist
institution. Indeed, the union has several minorities who are valued members
of the policing community.
● You might be willing to compromise in the direction of blind applications, as
long as it only represents the first stage in the application process. Face-to-
face, personal interviews that probe applicants’ backgrounds and values are
essential, as is the ability to hire members of old policing families, who have
innate knowledge of the challenges and values of the job. Good policing is all
about character and integrity, and the police force risks hiring more errant
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policemen (like the one in the video) if they eliminate the personal aspects of
the hiring process.
● Leftist activists and professors assume that hiring more minority police would
lead to less abuse, but this is far from the case. A study you read recently
confirmed a trend that you already knew from experience: in the United
States, black officers shoot just as often as white officers when they are placed
in the same situation. Giving minorities preference in the hiring process would
hurt non-minority applicants, and benefit no one in the community.
Individual characters
The two specific characters for this group are a father and son, members of a
large non-minority family in which many of the men have worked as city police.
You are both leaders in the city’s Police Union.
● You are Anthony M., a non-minority, 60-year-old career policeman. In your
forty years on the city police force, you have seen the importance of traditional
policing values for maintaining order in a rapidly changing city. You believe
that fair hiring practices and an emphasis on character are crucial, and that
policies which favor certain ethnic groups are deeply unfair to young white
policemen like your son, Mark M., and his younger brothers, all young men of
deep integrity. You believe that discriminating against such men would do
harm to the police force’s effectiveness, and reduce safety in the community.
● You are Mark M., Anthony B.’s 30-year-old son. You have been a policeman
for a decade, and plan to make a career in the Cinnamon City Police
Department. Like your father, you value tradition, character, and color-blind
hiring policies that give preference to no one just because of their race.
However, as someone who grew up in the city as it was becoming more
diverse, you have more minority friends than your father, and you have seen
that discrimination has sometimes made it difficult for these friends to find
good jobs. You are interested in considering options that would ensure your
employer’s hiring practices are truly color-blind, including blind applications
and cultural sensitivity training. You are strongly opposed, though, to any plan
that might compromise the quality of and opportunities available to your co-
workers.
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3.4 Minority Police Officers Association
Who are you? The Minority Police Officers Association is a group of police officers from various
minority groups that have come together to fight discrimination in the workplace
and promote active recruitment of minority officers. They are in favor of a quota.
What is your position?
● The currently released studies show that racial profiling and police violence are
a problem in their community. More often than non-minority citizens,
minorities are victims of ill-founded arrests, harassment and police violence,
which is why many minority members do not trust the police.
● Without trust, people will not cooperate with the police. As a result, the police
force cannot work efficiently and will face hostilities when on patrol. You are
convinced that crime cannot be fought successfully by an almost exclusively
non-minority police force. A more diverse force will have better relationships
with the community, since they will more greatly reflect the composition of the
community they serve. You think that a diverse team of police officers is better
at solving problems, due to a variety of different approaches that can
challenge traditional ways of thinking.
● Throughout your career, you have witnessed discrimination against minority
policemen and policewomen at the hands of non-minority police. Indeed, as a
minority, you have experienced discrimination from well-meaning colleagues
on a regular basis. Such discrimination is hard to talk about when there are
hardly any minorities on the force to begin with. If it hopes to create a
welcoming environment for its minority employees, the police force must take
explicit steps to increase the proportion of policemen from minority
backgrounds.
● Officers that are members of a minority are underrepresented in the police
force. You think that a “do nothing” approach will not change this situation,
because minorities are discriminated against in the application process
(recruitment officers will favor non-minority applicants).
● The blind application procedure is not sufficient, because you cannot (and
should not have to) hide your identity throughout the entire application
process (i.e. in a job interview). Increasing the number of minority police is a
very urgent priority, and the police force should not merely eliminate
discrimination against minority applicants, but treat such a background as an
asset in the application process.
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Individual characters
● You are Maria K., a police officer representing an ethnic minority. You have
been in the police force for ten years now, and have regularly experienced
discrimination and even harassment at the hands of non-minority policemen
because of both your ethnicity and your gender. You are worried that in the
discussion about diversifying the police force, women´s issues are left out. In
addition to your group’s arguments, you want to see more women employed
on the police force, and advocate for a gender-based quota. You think that
female victims tend to trust female officers more, and that these officers are
better equipped to work with such victims.
● You are a Yusuf A., a 40 year old police officer. You are both an ethnic and
religious minority. You have experienced discrimination yourself in the police
force (inappropriate jokes), and think that the current admission policies are
not fair (your brother has been rejected, even though the person who got the
job instead has lower qualifications). When patrolling, many minorities find it
easy to trust you, and you feel that you are more sensitive than your non-
minority colleagues to these community members’ circumstances and needs.
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3.5 Organization for Minority Rights
Who are you?
Your group, the Organization for Minority Rights (OMR), has been a strong,
respected voice for disadvantaged minorities for over fifty years. Group
leadership consists of many prominent professors, lawyers, and other concerned
advocates from both the minority and non-minority communities, and its general
membership encompasses thousands of minority people. The organization is
known for its ability to build coalitions to get things done, and for choosing its
battles wisely to ensure continued success.
What is your position?
Your group is very interested in getting more minority officers on the police force,
and would like to advocate for an option that achieves this to the greatest degree
possible. The group is concerned by statistics showing that minority members still
face discrimination in the workplace and in encounters with the police:
● Salary: Minority men in the community make only 71% of what non-minority
men make , and work in racially segregated environments.14
● Unemployment: Minority unemployment is roughly twice as high as non-
minority unemployment.15
● Harassing Practices: Minority members are more likely to be stopped, frisked,
and searched by the police — but are actually less likely to be found with a
weapon or drugs upon search.16
● Decreased disparity: When minority police officers are on patrol, the disparity
between the number of minority and non-minority residents stopped is
decreased, likely due to decreased racial bias.17
In addition, the Organization for Minority Rights continues to emphasize that the
country of Zamarand, where Cinnamon City is located, has ratified the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
European Convention on Human Rights Protocol No. 12. The organization believes
14 Based on American statistics from The Black and White Labor Gap in America by Christian E. Weller and Jaryn Fields of the Center for American Progress, July 2011. 15 see above 16 Based on Los Angeles, USA statistics from the Executive Summary of Racial Profiling & the LAPD by Ian Ayres, for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, Oct. 2008 (based on LAPD data from 2006). 17 see above
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that local governments within the country should engage in affirmative action18 to
ensure that minority members of the public are not treated unequally by police
officers, and that they will have access to jobs in the police department just like
non-minority applicants. Action should also be taken to promote minority
employment in government services to increase diversity and help remove
barriers. Options like quotas, blind applications, diversity training for police, and
data collection on racial profiling are only a few ideas offered to help the city
address this pressing issue.
Individual characters
● You are Angela E., a prominent member of Organization for Minority Rights.
You believe that this is an issue that OMR should really get behind by pushing
for a progressive set of solutions involving quotas for the police department,
which would ensure the largest possible number of jobs for minority
applicants. You are an elderly non-minority professor at a very prestigious
university in a neighboring town, and have been involved in a good deal of
the research and discussion that OMR and other like-minded organizations
refer to in these debates over diversity and discrimination.
● You are Thomas A., President of Organization for Minority Rights. You are a
lawyer who has worked both with OMR and with minority police and
firefighter associations for over twenty years, to help minorities gain access
to equal opportunities in employment, education, and voting. You are 55
years old. You believe that getting more minority police officers on the force
is a vital step toward addressing the discrimination problems in the city, and
you acknowledge that quotas would likely be the approach most certain to
produce that result. At the same time, you know that OMR has many
different campaigns that it is working on at the moment to help minorities,
and that it does not want to alienate any potential allies. As such, you think
that blind applications may be one of the better ways of increasing
opportunities for diversity on the force, although it is not a perfect solution to
the challenge of creating understanding.
18 See Article 4 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (footnote 2).
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3.6 Citizens for Safe Communities
Who are you?
The group of Citizens for Safe Communities unites citizens who live in Cinnamon
City and participate in community affairs. You are concerned about the dramatic
increase in the number of minority residents in the neighborhood, along with
growing crime rates. Your group is comprised of many senior citizens, a few local
business owners, and a popular author who is publicly critical of diversity.
What is your position?
● You know that the police force is traditionally a non-minority profession, and
you value tradition. Members of your group have had negative experiences
with individual minority police officers, whom you see as troublingly lenient
towards minority criminals.
● While you personally know only very few members of minority groups, you
have seen many of them on television. They strike you as people with little
respect for the laws, values and traditions of Cinnamon City.
● According to you, there is no such thing as a ‘blind application’. If you want
to become a policeman you need to have an interview. You cannot hide your
identity. You perceive this debate to be very artificial.
● You are convinced that if you introduced quotas, it would create a forced
policy of employing minorities even if they are not needed, and some
talented non-minority people would be shut out.
● You believe that minorities live in strongly loyal communities; therefore,
minority police may not want to fine/penalize their compatriots, or they may
collaborate with minority criminals. Because of this, the rest of the population
cannot expect help from the police.
● You are concerned that the employment of minority persons may create
tensions within the police force and between officers. Minorities are in a
difficult social situation: they are poor. You think that if these minorities join
the police, the rate of corruption within the force will increase.
● You hold the opinion that the social and moral values held by minorities, as
well as their culture, are different from yours. Therefore, you foresee
problems if they have to enforce laws that are foreign to them.
● You feel that not all the other groups immediately understand your concerns.
This is why you are in favor of a study investigating the correlation between
increasing crime rates and increased minority presence.
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● You also agree that incidents of police brutality should not happen in the
future, as this sheds a negative light on the non-minority police force. Your
goal is to keep the police force—and community—the way it has always been.
Individual characters
● You are Lilly V., an active member of Citizens for Safe Communities. You are
worried about the changing demographics of Cinnamon City, and see a
correlation between the increasing crime in the city and the influx of
minorities. You believe that security and tradition go hand-in-hand, and you
fear what will become of the city when traditional values are lost.
● You are Phil N., a popular author and public intellectual. Recently you
published a bestselling book, in which you developed your theory that
communities’ problems arise due to increasing ethnic diversification. You
have personal experience of police misconduct, and have heard similar stories
from many others. Citizens rely upon you as an intelligent person with
serious scientific arguments. Your radical position of no quotas or blind
applications is widely welcomed by the majority of citizens of Cinnamon City.
● You are Christopher M., the owner of an antique shop. Your store was
vandalized multiple times over the past month. The minority officer who
patrols your neighborhood seemed helpless, and you suspect that he had no
interest in helping you (as a non-minority person) at all. The only thing he
suggested was to install cameras. You installed the cameras, and later on
recorded videos saw faces of young minority boys. In your opinion, minority
police will lead to mass disorder in the neighborhoods of Cinnamon City.
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3.7 Collective Against Police Brutality
Who are you?
Your group assembles young, highly intelligent activists, all under 35, who fight
against police brutality. The majority of your group members have non-minority
backgrounds and are radically progressive. You work in solidarity with minorities
who have been victims of police brutality and racial profiling. You founded the
Collective as a student association only a year ago, which is why both financially
and organizationally your group operates on a grassroots level. However, you are
motivated to build a strong network for your young organization. You are
intellectuals influenced by Critical Theory,19 which asserts, “There is no right life
in the wrong one.” The “wrong” system has to be changed first; only then is there
the chance of a “right” action.
What is your position?
You are strongly in favor of a quota system for the police force. You believe that
discriminatory hiring practices have caused the racial profiling and police
brutalities that are tearing Cinnamon City apart. This is why you really hope that
at some point in the future, there will be a lawsuit in front the national
Constitutional Court that makes explicit reference to the UN Anti-Discrimination
Convention. You view the police force as a conservative and sometimes
repressive organ of state power, which makes no checks on police misconduct in
the city, and believe that as a conservative body it will be slow to implement
progressive ideas.
● You think you need the quota system if you really want to change the status
quo characterized by discrimination against minorities in the police force.
● Blind applications would merely be a well-meaning action carried out within a
broken system. There is still structural discrimination against minorities in
education, for example, and in other parts of the application process.
● You are convinced that the local government and police force have to
implement a quota, because this system of discrimination will only improve if
there is some proactive force to spark change.
19 Critical Theory: Invented by Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno. Key books: ”Negative
Dialectic“ and the ”Minima Moralia“ - Critical Theory states that only holistic methods and strong critics can change a society. In this case, a quota represents a much stronger criticism of the police structure than the method of blind applications, so quotas are, in the end, better for change. Many students (especially the ones who founded a community like the Collective Against Police Brutality) quote or use the content of Critical Theory without having deeper knowledge about it.
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● In addition, you believe the institution of a quota will encourage minorities to
apply to the police force.
Individual characters
● You are Agatha B., a very active member of the Collective, an ethnic
minority, and a social worker who councils victims of police brutality. You
have felt repeatedly insulted by non-minority police officers, who have
treated you like a criminal. They regularly ask you for identification for no
reason, and have become aggressive when you were unable to find it
immediately. You are upset by the police force’s oversimplified discourse on
diversity, and especially by the way that leaders in the department have
dismissed your complaints in the past. You are open to compromise and
negotiation, but are angry about the conservative wing which seems
dominant in the force, and which favors the status quo.
● You are William P.D., a highly intelligent student at the city university. You
like reading complicated books about critiques of capitalism, society and
repressive state power. In all your ideas, you are quite idealistic and a bit of
a utopian. Negotiation, to you, seems always to result in the minimum
degree of compromise. For this reason you prefer to take a strong position,
because you feel that many, many people do not understand that they are
still living under control of the insane and repressive system of capitalism and
state power, which leads them to compromise in everything.
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4. Debriefing
4.1. Procedure and Questions
Once the moderators have formally closed the meeting, time should be called and
participants directed to return to their original seats by the facilitators. Now it is
important to pause for a moment and to actively step away from the
roles formerly assumed. While the direction of the discussion can be tailored
by the facilitator in whatever way he or she feels is valuable for the group, below
are a few questions to help get things started:
● Were you surprised by the outcome that was reached after voting? Why or
why not?
● Was there anything about your role that made it difficult to play?
● How does your real-life social position (race, gender, class, etc.) affect your
views on these issues? How might group members’ real identities have
impacted the ways that they played their roles? How might your own role or
other roles have played out differently, if the people playing them had been
from different social positions?
● Did you feel that your group’s concerns were heard in the discussions?
● Do you think the outcome addresses the problems faced by minorities? How?
What do you think would help more?
● The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
which is discussed in the background materials given to everyone, also
mentions something called “special measures.” Article 2 of the Convention
says that states will take special measures, or affirmative action, to make
sure that everyone enjoys these rights on an equal basis, and that such
measures will not constitute reverse discrimination. Quotas are a common
example of this type of measure. What do you think of this idea?
● What additional information that was not in the packet would have helped
you make this decision?
● Do you see any similarities between this situation and a similar situation of
discrimination in your own community or country?
● Did the discussion in today’s game remain focused on human rights, and on
the needs and rights of disadvantaged individuals? Or, did the focus shift to
the political desires of special interest groups? If this were a real community
making this decision, what would help to prevent this if it happened?