Hidden Brain - Changing Behavior, Not Beliefs
Episode Date: January 11, 2022The rift between police and Black Americans can feel impossible to bridge. But in his work with police departments across the U.S., Yale psychologist Phillip Atiba Goff has found novel ways to address... the problem.If you like this show, please check out our new podcast, My Unsung Hero! And if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Early in the morning on August 17th, 1999,
an earthquake struck northwestern Turkey.
It was the first of two earthquakes
that would devastate that nation and parts of Greece.
Whole cities were reduced to rubble.
Thousands of people were killed
and hundreds of thousands were left homeless.
Amid the destruction, however,
something extraordinary happened.
Turkish rescue workers saved a Greek child
from the wreckage of a building.
A Greek man offered to donate a kidney to someone in Turkey.
And the Greek foreign minister, George Papandreo,
called on his fellow Greeks to offer aid.
I heard the news and the media immediately asked me,
have you sent a statement?
And I said, you know, I sent a statement,
but I want to say something more.
Why don't we help the Turks?
Why don't we give blood?
What made this remarkable is that Greece and Turkey have long had a rocky relationship,
marked by periods of open warfare and animosity.
But George Papandreos saw an opportunity for rapprochema between the two nations.
I felt this was a real issue, but it was also a political act. The idea of blood, of course, has a much deeper symbolism.
The interesting thing, which I hadn't expected, was there was an outpour of help.
In the weeks that followed, the blood drive intervention and other aid efforts transformed
the way many Greeks and Turks saw each other. They began to view each other not as enemies,
but as fellow victims of a terrible disaster.
Very quickly, this sentiment spilled over into new domains.
So then all of a sudden you saw things coming out which you know we would never expect it.
So cookbooks that are Greek Turkish cookbooks. Of course, why not? We have competitions who makes better Baklava.
Then we had TV series where the Turkish man or Turkish woman
would fall in love with a Greek woman or a Greek man.
So these soap operas that were became very popular.
The blood drive reframed the relationship.
It was a psychological intervention and it was powerful.
Today we're going to look at a similar psychological intervention. It targets
one of America's most pressing social challenges. The way in which radical
social change takes place is a step and a step and a step and and a step, and a step, and then a fall.
How changing the frame around a problem can make the seemingly impossible possible.
This week on Hidden Brain. Most Americans have strong and automatic reactions to news reports involving police shootings.
Some of us are outraged, some defensive.
All of us feel exhausted.
It often feels like we are stuck between two camps, one that's outraged about the police,
and another that's outraged that we are outraged about the police, and another that's outraged that we are outraged about
the police.
At Yale University, psychologists Philip Attiba Gough has come at the problem in a novel
way.
His data show there are indeed racial disparities in how policing unfolds in many communities.
Disparities tied not to the occurrence of crime or the prevalence of poverty, but the
choices that police officers make.
What makes his work unusual is how he thinks we should fix the problem.
His novel approach has produced that rarest of things,
consensus between police and communities,
and actual change.
Philip Patiba-Goff, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me.
Philip, back in 2007, you were starting out
as a young faculty member at Penn State.
You attended a conference with academics
and law enforcement officers.
There was a well-dressed black woman sitting
in the back of the room.
She was a senior officer in the Denver Police Department.
You went up to say hello to her,
and she said something
odd in response. What did she say? Yeah, I went up to her because she was sitting by herself
and I wanted to make her feel welcome so I asked if I could sit down and she told me that I
lacked the moral fortitude to do anything real with my life. So that's an odd thing to say to someone
you're meeting for the first time. The woman's name was Tracy Kazee and she was essentially throwing down a challenge to you as an
academic. Give me the context for her remark. So there was a 15 year old boy who was suffering
from mental illness. He grabbed a knife allegedly because he was frustrated. He couldn't communicate
with his family. His family got scared. They called law enforcement law enforcement showed up and killed this boy in his own home. At a town hall meeting that followed African American woman asked
Tracy, do you train your officers to kill young black men? And this is a slam dunk from a PR
perspective. It's an easy question. You just say no and move on. But because of who Tracy is,
she actually heard the question. She wanted to know the answer and she realized and then set out loud.
I don't know.
So after that incident, she spent the next two years trying to figure out who could help
her answer that question.
She wanted someone to work with who would not care about how long it took to get the answers.
And she was frustrated, I think, by the fact that the academy was not set up to help people
answer those kinds of questions.
So she found me and we began to try and answer not just that question, but the deeper questions
of what do you do with the reality of racism in the context of public safety?
The boy who was killed was Paul Childs and the incident happened in Denver in 2003.
Philip and Tracy said, I don't know, to the question, does your police department train officers
to kill young black men? What I'm hearing is that she felt they might be something structural
embedded in police practices that made it more likely that an officer might kill a young black man.
in police practices that made it more likely that an officer might kill a young black man? It wasn't just, hey, yeah, maybe there's some structural stuff going on.
Maybe the training is having this unintended consequence.
It was how on earth have we been doing this in this country for 100 plus year?
We haven't bothered to answer that question.
And in most places, we haven't bothered to ask it of the people who have the capacity
to make sure there's an answer.
There's a kind of neglect, a negligence, in the way that we've asked questions of our
public safety that reveals that we haven't centered the experiences of the people who
fear getting killed by the folks who respond when you call out in crisis.
That was a lot of the frustration that I know that she felt in that moment.
In the year since that meeting,
you and Tracy Kuzi have set up a national organization.
We're going to talk at length about the work you've done,
but I want to start by establishing the context for your work.
Many of us feel a sense of hopelessness
when we hear about discrimination and policing.
You say that one reason for this hopelessness
is that for the last 250 years,
we have defined the problem wrong.
We have defined the problem in a way that effectively makes the problem unsolvable.
What do you mean by that?
So if the problem is individual character inside hearts and minds, a defect of the soul
that we've got to fix.
There are many problems with that, the first of which of course is that it doesn't track
particularly closely with the science, but probably more importantly, it's just a hard
problem to fix.
And then we're having a conversation about a thing that is almost impossible to reliably
measure.
There's no saliva test to be like,
nope, like you're 45% racist.
So now you definitely gotta go to the reeducation center.
Like there's no way to really know.
And even if you could,
then you've maybe fixed the one person.
And that's not gonna work across 18,000 law enforcement agencies
in this country.
And that's just law enforcement.
Forget about everybody who's got access to 911 and can use law enforcement as their personal
racism concierge.
So it creates layers of difficulty at solving the problem from the difficulty detecting
it to the ability to actually change hearts and minds.
And that is exhausting.
When you look at how often we have racism producing outcomes
that are so tragic as to make you have to shut down
your whole life for a day or a week or a month or longer.
Forget about the country.
I want to look at three examples from the news
that illustrate how we have long thought
about the problem of disparities in policing.
Later in the show, we look at how redefining the problem can help us rethink those challenges.
In March of 2021, two police officers responded to reports of gunfire in the Chicago neighborhood
Little Village.
They changed a suspect, Adam Toledo, down a dark alley.
Can you tell me what happened next?
Yeah, Adam Toledo was the boy.
He was hanging out with somebody else who allegedly had fired a gun.
That individual was closer to adulthood, handed the gun to Adam Toledo, who ran away, and
then when realizing that law enforcement was close
tried to dispose of the gun in a way that he wouldn't get in trouble.
The officer saw the gun, saw it flash and move, and then killed Adam Toledo.
I remember there was a huge debate about the case.
Some people said shooting a 13 year old child
simply unacceptable.
Nothing more to discuss.
Others said, hang on, the police could not have known
that he was 13, and Adam Toledo looked like he was armed.
The officer had to make a split second decision.
He did not know if Adam Toledo was raising his arms
to surrender or raising his arms to open fire.
So each side not only feels they are right, but that the other is unsympathetic, irrational,
maybe even evil.
That's exactly right.
And this is one of the reasons why this becomes impossible.
You start seeing this from the officer's perspective and in Chicago in particular, you have
an armed populace.
You don't know the age of the person. You know that they're running away.
You know that they're probably faster than you.
So there's a chance that they're going to get around the corner and then wait for you.
You clearly see a weapon.
You know that there was supposed to be a weapon present.
The person is turning to face you.
And now I got to make a decision.
And if I'm wrong and they've got a gun and they're pointing it at me, that's the last
mistake I ever get to make.
There is a saying in law
enforcement, I'd rather be tried by 12 than carried by six. And so you make the decision that makes
sure you go home at the end of the day, because the majority of people you're dealing with are people
who you think want to hurt you. And from a community perspective, every piece of that seems sociopathic
and homicidal. There is a scared 13 year old boy who has been burdened by an older
person with trying to make sure that our incredibly cool criminal legal system doesn't catch him too.
And while complying with the the asks of every adult around him, he's executed.
Here to me is the crux of the whole thing. If we can't imagine that we could have prevented
that situation in the first place, it's our failure of imagination that gets kids like
Adam Toledo killed.
Let's look at another case that shows a different facet of the problem, Philip.
In Brooklyn, Center, Minnesota, police stopped Dante Wright for having expired car registration
tags.
Now many listeners will be familiar with the story since the police officer involved was
recently found guilty of manslaughter.
But tell us what happened when the police pulled Dante over.
So the senior officer who is also a training officer
is trying to restrain Dante Wright as Dante Wright
is trying to get away.
And that senior officer then calls out
Taser, Taser, Taser.
That's what you're supposed to do when you grab the Taser
to let everybody know there's an energy controlled weapon,
let them get clear.
She does not, in fact, grab the Taser.
She grabs her firearm, shoots and kills Dante Wright.
So I feel in the aftermath of these incidents,
there are often multiple claims and counterclaims.
Dante Wright's mother said he called her during the incident
and said he'd been pulled over because he had air fresheners
hanging from his rearview mirror.
Now, that sounds like a trivial infraction,
and many people concluded it showed the police
had malicious intent.
But I want to play you a clip from Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Ganon at a news conference
shortly after the shooting.
It is my belief that the officer had the intention to deploy their taser, but instead shot
Mr. Wright with a single bullet.
Disappears to me, from what I've viewed in the officer's reaction and
distress immediately after that this was an accidental discharge that resulted in
the tragic death of Mr. Wright. So the family saying look who pulls over someone
for hanging air fresheners in their car. It's racist cops of course. The police
say no-no-no the cop was distressed after the shooting. This proves she could not have been racist.
And almost instantly we start arguing about what's happening inside the police officer's mind.
That's exactly it. And I think one of the ways that it's important to understand the way that we do race in the United States,
we've got scripts. If I tell you a story, and there is an attractive woman walking her dog, the dog pulls on the
leash and she falls down and then a very attractive gentleman who probably has a British accent
goes to help her up and she's embarrassed.
Where are we?
We're clearly in the middle of a romantic comedy and that was a meet-cute.
We don't just have genres for movies, we have genres for the stories that play out in our
society.
And the story, the tragic awful killing of Dante Wright and the killing of Tamir Rice
and the killing of Adam Toledo, we quickly put that inside of genres where the relative
question is, how sinister is the officer, how deserving of death was the victim.
And those are terrible genres to help us write the narratives that get us out of
here, which is why the definition of racism is so much part of the problem. If that's
not our definition, we have to tell different stories.
Controversial cases involving police shootings of black people often devolve into discussions
about intentions and character. As we confront case after case, our framing causes us to reach for sweeping conclusions
that reflect our growing sense of despair.
This is what happened after police in Louisville, Kentucky,
used a no-knock warrant to enter the home of 26-year-old medical technician, Breonna Taylor.
My understanding is, they went into a house that they thought people were distributing drugs.
They thought that there might be armed conflict once they entered and that those who were
in the house were going to be a flight risk.
Those are the criteria often that law enforcement uses to request a no-knock warrant so that
they can enter without announcing themselves in advance other than to say, here we are,
we're Louisville PD, now your door is kicked in and we are in your house.
Brianna Taylor's boyfriend opened fire when he thought intruders were breaking into the home.
The police fired back and killed Brianna. Shortly afterwards, a grand jury declined to indict
the officers. Here's how Brianna Taylor's family attorney Benjamin Crump responded.
It underscores what we have been saying all alone. There seems to be two justice systems
in America, one for black America and one for white America.
Philip, you're sleeping inside your own home. You wake up to the sounds of people breaking
in. Seconds later, there's a gunfight and you end up shot to death.
From the point of view of the black community, it's easy to feel that the system is rigged
against you.
Yeah, there are particulars to the charging in that case that were incredibly bleak.
And I should clarify here, there are multiple black communities, many of whom saw Breonna
Taylor's fate as something that could have happened to them.
I'm glad you pointed out there are many black communities.
As a black man yourself, Philip, have you ever had to worry about a police officer pulling
a weapon on you?
I'm a black man in America, so of course I have.
Even once while I was shadowing law enforcement to learn how they did it. I was mistaken for a protester, an approach aggressively by law enforcement, and I had
to have a captain step in and be like, if you put a harm, one of the very, very few hairs
on this man's head, there will be problems.
If you're black in the United States, and this hasn't happened to you, you were living
a vanishingly rare life.
And of course, as anger the police has grown in many communities, the police feel increasingly
betrayed.
I want to play you a clip from former Milwaukee police chief Ed Flynn.
All of those issues are magnified by what's basically been an unrelenting campaign to
de-legitimize, stigmatize and dehumanize America's police officers.
I think a climate has been created in which the deranged as well as the career criminal
well-armed feel emboldened to engage their desires to basically assassinate police officers.
Setting aside by the police I write or wrong to feel this way, is it accurate Philip
from your experience working with police departments to say that many officers feel like they are under siege?
Yeah, I think that's the right way to frame it. Moral amongst law enforcement is lower
than I've ever seen it. Moral among black officers is particularly low because they live
frequently with other black people. They go home frequently to black communities, and they catch all of the invective from
those communities, and they feel it.
And then they show up to a department that wants to erase or dismiss the critiques that
they themselves often have. The rift between police departments and black Americans can feel impossible to bridge,
and yet, in working with individual departments across the country, Philip has found ways
to begin to make progress.
That's when we come back.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Many of us carry around a model of what it means to be a racist.
That model usually involves reading the mind of the person, drawing conclusions
about their intentions, their motivations, their animosities. At Yale University, psychologist
Philipp Petiba-Goff has been asking a different question. Instead of spending hours fruitlessly
arguing about a police officer's intentions, what happens if we focus less on her character and
more on her actions?
Philip, many police officers say the tragedies we hear about in the news are outliers.
You've studied police use of force among white and non-white suspects.
Does the data show systematic differences in how police treat blacks versus whites?
Of course, the data revealed that.
The first step in answering that question is, are there disparities and there are massive
disparities?
The second question, which is immediately harder, is how much of those disparities are
driven by things police really can't and shouldn't be asked to control?
Things like poverty or crime.
And in fact, if we think that racism doesn't just exist
in policing, which by the way, it doesn't.
It exists in education, in housing, in employment,
in healthcare, so that crime is a lagging indicator
of other forms of racism.
In other words, you can make the argument that,
hey, racism's bigger than just police,
and that bigger racism is driving some of these disparities.
So what part belongs to the police and what part doesn't?
The answer is simply poverty and crime are insufficient to explain racial disparities
in a police use of force, stops, arrests, or other burdensome police behaviors.
What we see is that black folks across the country, about four times more likely to have
force used on them than white folks.
When you control for crime and poverty, black folks are in our data somewhere between one
and a half times as likely and 16 times as likely.
Sometimes it gets worse
because of the spatial distribution of law enforcement.
So Philip, when we look at data like that,
it's easy to conclude that racism has to be behind
these disparities, but you once wrote,
there is mounting evidence that racial discrimination
can occur, even absent racial bigotry,
either overt or covert.
What do you mean by that?
Yeah, and so I just want to reframe just a little bit that question.
It is racism.
It just doesn't have to be bigotry, right?
Bigotry and prejudice, that's inside.
I want us to get that racism is that pattern of behaviors out in the world.
So for instance, what a family is dealing with someone who is in the midst of mental health
crisis. They may try and talk to someone. They may try and reach out for help to someone
at a hospital. They may try and set something up for a clinic. When that family member who
is in mental distress doesn't want to go.
We don't have any resources that are available to the public to help out.
What that means is that people have a lot of money, have other folks they can call.
They can spend money on private therapy.
They can spend money for family counseling.
People without money, the only place to have to call when it gets really bad is 9-1-1.
And 9-1-1 has three options, a fire, ambulance, or a badge and a gun.
And so that's how without needing to dislike black people, it may, in fact,
black family members, as it was in the case of Paul Childs, who cry out for help.
But the way we have structured the system says that the folks who have the least
don't get the set of options and resources that would prevent them from needing our systems
of punishment to come and take the place of the systems we should have for care.
Now we talked earlier about your meeting with Tracy Kazee, the two of you started an organization
called the Center for Policing Equity.
And you wanted the focus to be not on what's happening inside the hearts and minds of police
officers, but on what they do.
You see, there's a long precedent for this idea in policing, at least when it comes to
combating crime.
That's right.
And I wish that I had figured out earlier that there was a really easy way
for everyone who's ever worked in an organization to understand it. It's just performance management.
That's it. It's nothing more fancy than that. In law enforcement, what they've done for
the last, you know, more than quarter century is they've measured crime. And about 80% of law
enforcement agencies use something like what's called CompStat.
But in its purest forum, the idea is you should be paying attention to crime.
If your goal is to prevent it, you should be looking for patterns.
And then when you're done finding the patterns, you should be trying to hold yourself accountable
for driving down the rates of crime.
That's a performance management 101 in any organization.
What do you want to get done?
What do you want to avoid? Track it. Hold people accountable to it.
So let's see how we can apply this model of performance evaluation to reducing discrimination
in policing. In 2011, you got a call from the Las Vegas Police Department. They were confronting
accusations that they used force too often. Now, instead of saying, let's examine the character of the officers in the department.
Of course, that's hard to measure, hard to change.
It's a bad metric for performance evaluation.
You looked at the data and found something tangible that could be measured and could be changed.
What was it?
What we found is that after foot pursuits, we saw a higher rate of use of force across
the board.
Now, foot pursuit is when someone runs away and the officer takes chase on foot.
It's not that complicated.
But it's pretty easy when you go back to someone and say, well, what does that feel like?
To understand why you get higher rates of force.
Because you took off, so I'm running after you.
That means my heart rate is up.
My adrenaline's going.
I know you're a bad guy, because who runs from the Cosmic Bad Guys in the minds of officers.
And then if you go around a corner, maybe you have a gun around the corner, or there's
a friend who's there to hurt me.
So even if you turn around and you say, hey, please don't hurt me and put your hands up,
you might be getting a shot to the kidneys for the price of making me run.
And so the result in Las Vegas, once we gave that back to law enforcement
and back to the community, they said,
hey, could you guys just literally take a breath?
And that was the comment.
That was the spirit that made the change.
They said, yeah, we really probably should.
So let's train differently.
Let's tell folks that they shouldn't touch someone
until backup has arrived.
They should count to 10, like everybody learns in their marriage counseling.
Do the things to deescalate your body so you don't end up engaging in unnecessary
use of force. That's the language of law enforcement.
And the following year, we saw a significant decrease in use of force.
My memory is it was 23% that following year and became a national model for how you do experienced
based training, all of which goes back to, what's the behavior?
What do we think causes the behavior?
What's the proximate to the behavior?
Can we make a change in the thing that makes that happen?
That will reduce the incidence of the behavior.
I mean, this takes us back to what happened when we discussed the Adam Toledo shooting.
Two people are running, it's a dark alley, they're both frightened, they can't see very
well, and they have to make split second high stakes decisions.
Do this kind of thing regularly, and of course bad things will occur.
Now, I want to draw attention to what happens when you don't focus attention on the character
of the police officer, instead of saying bad cops
shoot kids, if you say, hey, look, foot pursuits increase the risk of tragic mistakes. Let's
try and reduce the number of tragic mistakes in our department. Now, suddenly, cops and community
don't find themselves on opposite sides of the equation. They find themselves on the same page.
Yeah. So in negotiations and international relations and in business,
we talk about the difference between interests and positions.
So position is the thing you got to defend, right?
If I say, hey, no one can have their shoes on in my house,
you got to hold on your sock.
You're like, I guess I'm not coming in.
But if I say, hey, this is a rug that my parents gave me.
It's been the family for a long time.
It's real fragile.
We ask people to take their shoes off
so that we don't mess up the rug.
You're like, hey, can I walk around the rug?
I'm like, oh yeah, I should've come in the back door.
We can fix this.
We can work this out.
Because there are so many assumptions built in
to the way we talk about racism,
we end up establishing positions
before we've even listened to anybody's interests.
And so the thing that was shocking to me, I'm a black dude from Philly.
I figured when I showed up talking along for us, but I would find out that racist, racist
did racist things.
That's still true, but the majority of folks I encountered were like, oh, we get asked
to do too much stuff.
And we're definitely, we're going to catch hell in the press and from communities that
we really care about in large part because we get asked to do stuff. We should never get asked to do
So when you compare the the requests that I've received from law enforcement of the last 20 plus years
To the requests that I I hear from activists. They look really similar
Law enforcement says get us out of mental health get us out of substance abuse get us out of child welfare
Like remove us out of the schools.
Don't ask us to be on suicide watch.
Set up resources so that these communities that are blighted by crime have the thing so
they don't have to engage in crime in the first place.
If I were to tell you that came out of the mouth of an abolitionist, you wouldn't be surprised.
The major difference is law enforcement doesn't usually argue that they should get less money.
An activist right about now arguing for that quite loudly.
But the substantive policy changes outside of law enforcement have a lot of support from
law enforcement veterans, which I think is especially surprising to folks who are just
hearing the national conversation.
A few years after his walk in Las Vegas, Philip and his team began studying another idea.
Think back to the case involving Dante Wright.
Shortly after that shooting, people spent a lot of time arguing about whether the police
officer who pulled the trigger acted out of malice.
Few people stopped to ask a more basic question. Should armed police officers be
pulling over drivers for expired tags? Turned out, this was also a question
both the local community and the police were pondering in California. The Berkeley
Police Chief reached out in part because of pressure from communities in
Berkeley, California, and they had the idea to look at what are we doing on traffic stops.
If you've got a lot of physical violence in a place that would never have happened if
you didn't show up, the best solution might be don't show up.
The old joke is, hey, Doc, it hurts when I go like this.
Doc says, don't go like that.
And in Berkeley, they decided any low-level traffic enforcement let us mail you a ticket.
Because that's going to be safer for the officer. That's going to be safer for the resident.
And likely nobody dies from a paper cut.
To be clear, Philip is not saying there is never room for armed police.
He's saying, ask yourself if an officer with a badge and a gun needs to be your first
response to a problem.
If someone is driving around with expired tags and you can send them a ticket in the mail,
they might just pay the fine and get that tax renewed, problem solved. If they
don't respond to the ticket, you can then think of escalating your response. The very same
principle applies to the use of no-knock warrants. Philip told me about a local jurisdiction in
New York that asked for help.
We got involved with Ithaca and Tomkins County that wanted to do this together. And so it's really important.
It is really their work that we're talking about here.
They brought school-aged kids in to hear about their experiences and to say,
well, if we wanted to start over, start from scratch,
how what would that look like?
If we really focused on protecting folks who were vulnerable,
what systems would we build?
And it turns out that when you start that exercise,
you don't start with police.
You don't start with folks who have the ability
to dole out violence in order to get compliance with the law.
You start with the basic necessities of living.
And so the Communities in Ithaca and Tomkens County said,
well, we're gonna want folks who can respond to violence,
but we want them directed by folks who are thinking about
community solutions to public safety that will often not require law enforcement.
And along with that, our set of recommendations, including, yeah, we shouldn't have no
knock warrants.
Like we should be a community that knows who lives here well enough, that we don't have
to resort to the element of surprise to deal with folks who
are damaging the communities.
And where the community wants those folks to stop their behavior or even to be taken out
of it.
You know, Philip, in some ways, I'm struck by the fact that what you're advocating
and no disrespect here, it's actually not rocket science.
It's almost common sense.
If you want to reduce the risk that the police will shoot someone by mistake.
The first thing to do is don't send armed police to situations that don't require armed police.
So the hard part here is figuring out the interests and figuring out where is their room to move.
Where can we get collaboration, coalition, consensus to move us forward?
I say all the time, why are we bringing a badge and a gun to a place where someone's
thinking about ending their own life?
Philip Satsaqais where officers were called to a home where a man was pointing a gun at
his own head.
And the police said, that's a danger to us and Shahat end killed him.
Right? That's a danger to us and shot and killed him. Right?
That's a tragedy on top of tragedy because the family is concerned that this person is
going to die and then calls the state and the state shows up and does it for him.
But I wish it were the case that if you don't introduce a gun, the chance of getting shot
was zero.
Unfortunately, we've got so many guns in this country that that's not the case.
And that's what law enforcement and community folks will say is sometimes they're scared
that if you set up somebody, show somebody with a vest in a whistle, that's not going
to be enough.
So I wish that this were as simple as an ideological slogan.
It cannot be.
But the underlying logic is exactly what you say. If our goal is to keep
everybody safe and alive, there are lots of times when a badge and a gun are not the best things to
be introducing. You know, I'm reminded of something I read a while ago. After the US invasion of Iraq,
the US military was trying to figure out how troops could be
more effective in rebuilding trust with a local community.
And one of the things that General David Petrius eventually concluded was that if you're
trying to help people, but you're looking at them through the gun turrets of an armored
vehicle, or if you're walking in markets with an M14 rifle slung from your shoulders,
it not only makes it less likely people will trust you
It makes it more likely some small incident can end up with a whole lot of people getting shot
So it turns out even in military situations
Military-ized solutions might end up backfiring and of course if that's true in battle
It has to be triply true when it comes to police working in their communities when everyone is is tense, everyone is scared, and everyone
is armed, even in the absence of malice, the simple laws of probability dictate bad things are
going to happen with some regularity. That's exactly right, and the analogy is apt. Over the last
three decades, we've seen a precipitous decline in violent crime across the United States. That is the result of a whole bunch of things.
It's community focused projects,
it is leadership at the local and the state level,
but it's also new techniques in law enforcement
of showing up, not arresting the way out of the problem,
but showing up to places where violence might happen,
and people tend not to like to do illegal things
in the presence of law enforcement.
Like that's a portion of it, even though it's definitely not the only, and it may not even be the
largest portion of it.
So if I'm law enforcement, I have worked my behind-off to try and reduce the crime level because
I thought that was my job.
And I know that if I'm a chief, I'm definitely getting fired if the crime level goes up, and
that's almost the only reason I'm going to get fired.
I brought the crime level down, why don't you love us?
That's a real thing that law enforcement feels,
and I don't think it's a response
that's untethered to reality.
It's just untethered to the experiences
in black and brown communities where they say
you have been delivering violence
while you've been trying to deliver us from violence.
I find it fascinating that you're effectively addressing
problems related to racial disparities in policing
without accusing police officers of being bigots. There's very little finger pointing in your work, right? Yes, so in my day to day when I'm talking with law enforcement when I'm talking with communities,
when I'm talking with my team, we talk about race and racism a whole lot. What we don't talk about
is whether or not you met two or are a good person. We don't talk about character,
almost ever. But everybody who can answer the question, would you like to kill fewer people?
Would you like to be engaged in less racial disparity? Yes, I would like to do that, morally obvious
thing. There are things that can be done, but we don't have to talk about
racism the way most people talk about racism, because the way most people talk about racism is about
what kind of person you are, and I have found that to be almost entirely irrelevant to making the problem
get better. Philips efforts to reduce racial disparities in policing have been effective.
But are they emotionally satisfying?
That's when we come back.
You'll listen to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
For years now, working closely with communities and police departments, Yale University Psychologist Philip Pateba Gough has sought to reduce racial
disparities in law enforcement.
Every time he and his organization, the Center for Policing Equity go into a community,
they start by looking at the data.
When and where are police using force?
What are the specific contexts and situations that make it more likely? An officer will reach for a gun.
Are there situations that can be safely resolved by someone who doesn't have a badge in a gun?
Philip, you've worked with the community and the police department in Minneapolis since 2015.
You found that in a disproportionate number of situations where police end up using
force, there's one particular group of people involved. Who are they?
Whenever we're going into a community, the first thing we do we want to listen to the community.
In Minneapolis, one of the areas that was a concern was homelessness. I don't know if
you've ever been to Minneapolis, but unless it's June or July, it's cold, and
it sucks to have to be outside and not have a place you can go that's inside.
So folks end up in places where they can stay warm, but what that also does, it makes people
feel uncomfortable.
And so they call the police law enforcement shows up.
Someone who doesn't have a place to live says, I'm not done anything illegal, so they resist law enforcement,
and then force ensues.
You could train law enforcement to recognize that
and talk differently about it, or you could give people housing.
This is the thing that is the core of my frustration in doing this work,
is that oftentimes the only path available to make anything better
is to give something to law enforcement.
But you could just avoid all of this by having a warm place for people to sleep.
And so when communities activists within Minneapolis were saying, hey, we need money for this.
We provided some data that said, hey, you should do what the community is asking.
Take money out of law enforcement, put it into services for out-housed individuals,
and you can start to see if you should force go down.
So there's something both satisfying and profoundly dissatisfying about your work.
It's satisfying because you're making a difference, but I think one reason people might feel almost let down by your work
is it doesn't give us a feeling of moral triumph by focusing on what's
practical, by focusing on areas where police and communities are in consensus, I
feel we miss out on the opportunity for moral triumph. And that's a feeling we
definitely get when we share hot takes on social media.
Yes, the work that I do is not designed to satisfy Twitter. That is a thousand
percent accurate.
I think there's a deeper thing here as well, which is that it is hard to keep people's
attention on a story that is so tragic if you don't have a villain.
And it's easy to make some of these folks villains because they're villainous.
Individual cases, absolutely. The problem is, oftentimes, once you've activated based on that narrative,
then the theory of the problem is, well, then we got to get rid of this person or these
people and you're right back where you started.
We talked earlier about your work in Minneapolis. Now, as we all know, a few years later, Minneapolis
was the same city in which George Floyd was killed by an officer
after a convenience store clerk called 911.
Now, some people might say, look, your approach is fixing the problem around the edges.
It isn't getting to the heart of the problem.
It doesn't prevent egregious cases like this one from happening.
Yeah, the public lynching of George Floyd was gutting for the whole country.
The three years that we were there, we saw about an 18% reduction in police use of force.
So the three years before we were there, um, police use of force was on the rise.
Now, did we cause that decline?
I do not know.
So who knows how much of that was us and how much of that was the demands of organizers,
how much of that was all together.
It's, it's, it's genuinely difficult to say.
And we weren't set up to test that very squarely.
But if there's some portion of the work that we were doing that resulted in one in five
fewer people having forced use on them, that's not nothing.
All of these things are harm reduction.
They're reducing the harms of our addiction to punishment in this country.
That is not ever going to be the full solve.
But I look at this and I say, this was a tragic incident.
It was absolutely predictable, not necessarily Minneapolis, but anywhere where any of this
work is going on.
It doesn't negate the work that communities did to drive down
police use of force, and it doesn't mean that we should be throwing out some of the things
that have reduced the harm.
I love that you're using the framework of harm reduction, and I feel like we've had similar
debates when it comes to things like distributing condoms in schools or giving clean needles
to heroin addicts. There's something so seductive about wanting answers that are all or nothing,
you know, just say no to drugs, abstinence only.
How reduction says, if there's a small win to be taken, take it.
It's not enough, but not enough is better than nothing.
I've been black my entire life. I have seen promises.
I've seen, you know, leaders say what they could deliver, and I have never been part
of a moment that didn't feel ultimately disappointed, ultimately less than what was necessary.
And anyone who tells you that they can fix it all is singing songs from the music man. That is literally a fantastical musical untethered to what's possible.
There's another dimension of your work I want to flag because I think it comes up all the
time and the choices we make as a society. So much of what you're recommending is unsexy. It's about prevention.
It's not seeing something awful happen and reacting to it.
It's asking, how do we keep the bad stuff from happening in the first place?
And like all successful prevention efforts, when it works, no one notices
because the bad thing never actually happened.
So, you know, unsexy might be effective, but you have to admit it's also unsexy.
So first in response, I want to stick my claim to being the king of unsexy.
That is absolutely who I am and what I do.
Secondly, this is a part of my concern for the narrative work that's happening right now, where there's
a promulgation of villains.
Because a villain framing for all of this work ends up with the goal, catch them, punish
them.
Let's hold them accountable.
And we hear battle cries for justice for Breonna Taylor or justice for George Floyd.
There is no such thing.
Justice would have been them staying alive. But most local organizers that we engage
are actually saying, let's prevent these things
from happening in the first place,
let's equip communities with the resources,
so they don't have to call out in crisis at all.
Like what neighborhood sells houses,
what neighborhood has a real estate agent who says,
hey, the best part about living here, you get to call 911 all the time.
It's amazing.
That's not a thing.
Like the places where people want to live have the resources so they don't have to call
out in crisis.
Most of the activists who are doing serious work in local spaces are working on that on getting
the resources set up or getting alternative
crisis responders set up so that law enforcement is not our utility tool to handle every crisis
that happens in the communities that we'd like to forget existed.
Something odd often happens when you take the small winds and chip away at a problem.
Each effort, each change, can seem incremental, but over time, Philip says, it's like a snow
ball rolling down a hill.
Oftentimes the harm reduction is the way in to engage in more radical change.
And sometimes the things that you do that turn the dial slightly, it's like falling asleep,
happen slowly and then all at once.
Oftentimes that is the way in which radical social change takes place, is a step and a
step and a step and then a fall.
And my hope is that's where we're headed in terms of keeping black community safe, a
step and a step and a step, and a step, and then a fall.
A fall into a more prosperous country,
a more equal country, where folks have the resources
they need to not have to crawl out crisis in the first place,
where we send the appropriate resources,
which are not always a badge and a gun,
when they do have a crisis,
and where all of those things we're doing
to change the systems that we have,
don't impede the creation and the destruction of the systems that we need to move forward.
For anybody who's feeling, you know, despondent right now, what I would say is I think that often hopelessness is a luxury.
think that often hopelessness is a luxury. It's not an option for the people who are working hardest in this space because hopelessness
is the end of the work and we're just at the beginning.
Philip Attiba Gough is a psychologist at Yale University.
Along with Tracy Kazee, he is co-founder of the Center for Policing
Equity. Philip, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Ryan Katz, Kristen Wong, Laura Quarelle, Autumn
Barnes and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
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Simon is a tech journalist who runs a newsletter about trends in the media industry.
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I'm Shankar Vedantam, see you soon.