POLICE REFORM

 

Police Reform 

CPE Toolkit for Equitable Public Safety

C-Span Clip of Dr. Goff Testimony at Senate Hearing on Police Use of Force and Community Policing 
6/16/20 (5:32) 

Perspectives on Policing: Phillip Atiba Goff
Phillip Atiba Goff | Annual Review of Criminology 
Center for Policing Equity and Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, USA; email: goff@policingequity.org 

NATIONAL JUSTICE DATABASE CITY REPORT Sacramento Police Department, 2014-2019 (March 2021)
Center for Policing Equity

SACRAMENTO POLICE DEPARTMENT:
Response to CPE’s Pathway from Data to Action: Guide and Policy Recommendations

SACRAMENTO POLICE DEPARTMENT
Contextual Information and Response to CPE City Report and Recommendations - Summary Report released July, 2021.

  • Text of the full response by SPD as a companion to the CPE report is available on the SPD Transparency website at: https://www.cityofsacramento.org/Police/Transparency

SACRAMENTO POLICE DEPARTMENT
Contextual Information and Response to Center for Policing Equity (CPE) City Report and Recommendations

Making Police Reforms Endure - The Keys for Success 
April 2010 | Trent Ikerd and Samuel Walker | U.S. DOJ COPS Office  

Police Reform A Curated Collection of Links
The Marshall Project

Police Reform and the Dismantling of Legal Estrangement
Essay by Monica C. Bell | The Yale Law Journal (PDF)

The Civil Rights Division’s Pattern and Practice Police Reform Work: 1994-Present  
Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice - January 2017 (PDF)

An Interactive Guide to the Civil Rights Division’s Police Reforms  (PDF)

How we can make racism a solvable problem – and improve policing (*Recommended)
Dr. Phillip Atiba Goff
TED Talk April 2019 (12:04) 

The path to ending systemic racism in the US” 
Dr. Phillip Atiba Goff, Rashad Robinson, Dr. Bernice King, and Anthony D. Romero
TED Talk June 2020 (1:06:22)

Study: Major crime complaints fell when NY police took a break from 'proactive policing'
With the drop in relatively low-level police activity, scientists found that civilian complaints of major crimes dropped by about 3 percent to 6 percent
Sep. 27, 2017 | Police1byLexipol | Los Angeles Times