Is It Recording? Racial Bias, Police Accountability, and the Body-worn Camera Activation Policies of the Ten Largest U.S.Metropolitan Police Departments in the USA

‘Is it recording? Body-worn camera activation policies of the ten largest U.S. metropolitan police departments’ (2018) 9 Columbia Journal of Race & Law 141.

50 Pages Posted: 13 May 2019

See all articles by Julian R. Murphy

Julian R. Murphy

University of Melbourne, School of Law

Date Written: April 10, 2019

Abstract

In recent years there has been a growing belief that the pressing problem of racial bias in policing might be ameliorated by a technical fix, namely, police body-worn cameras. Accordingly, body-worn cameras have been introduced in police departments across the country, giving rise to a variety of different internal guidelines and policies. This Note surveys body-worn camera policies of the ten largest metropolitan police departments in the United States in order to assess their relative effectiveness at combatting racial bias. Particular attention is paid to “activation” requirements, which specify the sorts of events police officers are required to record on their cameras. The survey shows that, at present, many body-worn camera policies are not appropriately calibrated to successfully reduce racial bias in policing. In particular, it is suggested that many current body-worn camera policies do not adequately target the two different strains of racial bias – implicit racial bias and deliberate racial profiling. This Note concludes by offering a draft activation policy for potential adoption by police departments to better use body-worn cameras to reduce racially biased police practices.

Keywords: body-worn cameras, privacy, policing, racial bias, implicit bias, racial profiling

Suggested Citation

Murphy, Julian, Is It Recording? Racial Bias, Police Accountability, and the Body-worn Camera Activation Policies of the Ten Largest U.S.Metropolitan Police Departments in the USA (April 10, 2019). ‘Is it recording? Body-worn camera activation policies of the ten largest U.S. metropolitan police departments’ (2018) 9 Columbia Journal of Race & Law 141., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3369579

Julian Murphy (Contact Author)

University of Melbourne, School of Law ( email )

University Square
185 Pelham Street, Carlton
Victoria, Victoria
Australia

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