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Dispute Resolution Lessons Gleaned from the Arrest of Professor Gates and \u22The Beer Summit\u22

机译:盖茨教授和\ u22啤酒峰会被捕后解决争端的教训

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摘要

America\u27s fantasy of a post-racial society was shattered on July 16,2009, when a white police officer arrested Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, a well-respected African-American academic, in his own home. Our historical racial fissure was widened. Once again, our thoughts were plagued with tortured images of our system of racialized law enforcement: the torture of Abner Louima, the beating of Rodney King, the killing of Amadou Diallo. Predictably, Americans became further polarized, as they simultaneously blamed and defended responses to racism.In what was perceived by some as a dramatic and unanticipated turn of events, and perceived by others as a necessary political response, on July 30, 2009, President Obama convened the \u22beer summit,\u22 a metaphorical mediation. President Obama invited Professor Gates and Police Sergeant James Crowley to the White House South Lawn to resolve the issues surrounding the arrest of Professor Gates by Sergeant Crowley. As Professor Gates and Sergeant Crowley sat around the table drinking beer with President Obama, their discussion about race shifted from a demonizing conversation to a humanizing conversation. The two men gained insight into what had happened and began exploring what might be done to prevent this from happening again.The beer summit\u27s success challenges the long-held taboo proscribing the mediation of civil rights violations such as racial profiling. Civil rights activists, critical race scholars, and the benefactors of civil rights advancement have long considered the mediation of civil rights violations as a neutering of civil rights law and a muting of compelling injustice narratives. This commentary encourages civil rights purveyors to step back from such absolutes and reconsider the appropriateness of mediation in select instances of civil rights offenses. Nothing in this commentary should be misconstrued as a blanket endorsement of mediation in lieu of litigation to redress civil rights violations. Rather, this is an invitation to re-examine the possibilities and reconsider mediation as one forum of choice in addressing race-based civil rights conflicts with law enforcement.Understandably, you may react to this difficult discussion from your personal vantage point about race. After all, whether you consider racial profiling to be a ubiquitous societal problem or a societal ill of the past depends on who you are, your personal experience, your professional perspective, and your definition of the problem. In this commentary, racial profiling is broadly defined as “the practice of ‘police routinely [using] race as a negative signal that, along with an accumulation of other signals, causes an officer to react with suspicion.’” For some, the definition will be too encompassing; for others, not broad enough.This commentary proceeds with this discussion in five parts. Part One reviews the facts surrounding Professor Gates\u27 arrest. Part Two analyzes the transformation in the participants\u27 conflict discourse that was used to narrate their experience before and after the beer summit. Part Three then hypothesizes why racial profiling remains so pernicious today despite rigorous legislative and judicial enforcement. Part Four offers how mediation might be used as a responsive complement to the existing legal framework. In conclusion, Part Five invites the reader to consider the possibilities that mediation offers as one forum to respond to the multi-dimensional elements of racial profiling, as it exists today.
机译:2009年7月16日,一位白人警察在他自己的家中逮捕了哈佛教授亨利·路易斯·盖茨(Henry Louis Gates),这是一位备受尊敬的非裔美国人学者,美国对后种族社会的幻想破灭了。我们的历史种族裂痕扩大了。我们的思想再一次受到种族歧视执法体系的折磨图像的困扰:阿布纳·路易玛(Abner Louima)的酷刑,罗德尼·金的殴打,阿马杜·迪亚洛(Amadou Diallo)的杀害。可以预见的是,美国人在同时谴责和捍卫对种族主义的回应时变得更加两极分化.2009年7月30日,奥巴马总统在某些人认为这是戏剧性的,出乎意料的事件转变,而在另一些人看来则是必要的政治反应。召开了隐喻调解会议。奥巴马总统邀请盖茨教授和警官詹姆斯·克劳利中士前往白宫南草坪,以解决与克劳利中士被捕有关的问题。当盖茨教授和克劳利中士与奥巴马总统坐在餐桌旁喝啤酒时,他们关于种族的讨论从妖魔化的对话变成了人性化的对话。这两个人对发生的事情有了深刻的了解,并开始探索如何防止这种情况再次发生。啤酒峰会的成功挑战了长期以来禁忌禁止种族歧视等侵犯民权行为的禁忌。长期以来,民权活动家,批判种族学者和民权促进者一直认为,调解民权侵犯是对民权法的绝育和对令人信服的不公正叙述的淡化。该评论鼓励民权提供者放弃这种绝对立场,并重新考虑在某些民权犯罪案件中进行调解的适当性。本评论中的任何内容都不应误认为是一揽子认可调解代替诉讼来纠正侵犯民权的行为。相反,这是邀请您重新审视可能性,并重新考虑将调解作为与执法机构解决基于种族的民权冲突的首选论坛。可以理解的是,您可能会从个人的角度出发对这一艰难的讨论做出反应。毕竟,您是将种族特征视为普遍存在的社会问题还是过去的社会弊病,取决于您是谁,您的个人经历,您的专业观点以及对该问题的定义。在这篇评论中,种族描述被广义地定义为““经常[使用]种族作为消极信号,与其他信号的积累一起使军官对怀疑做出反应的警察做法”。太笼统了;对于其他人,还不够广泛。本评论分为五个部分。第一部分回顾了盖茨教授被捕的事实。第二部分分析了参与者冲突话语中的转变,该转变用来描述他们在啤酒峰会前后的经历。第三部分则假设了为何尽管有严格的立法和司法执行,但种族特征今天仍然如此有害。第四部分提供了如何将调解用作对现有法律框架的快速补充。总而言之,第五部分邀请读者考虑调解作为一种论坛来回应当今种族特征的多维要素所提供的可能性。

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    Greenberg, Elayne E.;

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