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Racial profiling or ethnic profiling is the act of suspecting, targeting or discriminating against a person on the basis of their ethnicity, religion, or nationality, rather than on individual suspicion or available evidence.
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Racial profiling involves discrimination against minority populations
and often builds on negative stereotypes of the targeted demographic. Racial profiling can involve disproportionate stop searches, traffic stops, and the use of surveillance technology for facial identification.
Racial profiling can occur de jure, when the state has policies in place that target specific racial groups, or de facto, when the practice may occur outside official legislation.
Critics argue that racial profiling is discriminatory, as it disproportionately targets people of color.
Supporters argue that it can be an effective tool for preventing crime
but acknowledge that the practice should be closely monitored and must
be used in a way that respects civil rights.
Academic debate
The subject of racial profiling has sparked debate between philosophers who disagree on its moral
status. Some believe that racial profiling is morally permissible under
certain circumstances, whereas others argue it is never morally
permissible.
Justifications
Those
who argue in favor of racial profiling usually set some conditions for
the practice to be justified. The profiling should be fair,
evidence-based and non-abusive. Proponents of racial profiling generally argue that, if these conditions are met, it can be an efficient tool for crime prevention because it allows law enforcement to focus their efforts on groups that are statistically more likely to commit crimes.
The most influential defense of racial profiling comes from Mathias Risse and Richard Zeckhauser. Risse and Zeckhauser provide a consequentialist
analysis of racial profiling, weighing the benefits and costs against
each other. They conclude that racial profiling is morally permissible
because the harms done to the search subjects are fewer than the
potential benefits for society in terms of security. Moreover, the
(innocent) subjects themselves also benefit because they will live a
safer environment overall.
Risse and Zeckhauser conclude that the objections to racial profiling are not rooted in the practice per se but in background injustice in our societies. Instead of banning racial profiling, they argue, efforts should be made to remedy racial injustice in our societies.
Consequences
Opponents
of racial profiling have claimed that those who support racial
profiling grossly underestimate the harms done by racial profiling and
fail to recognize how the practice can exacerbate racism.
Adam Omar Hosein argues that racial profiling may be permissible
under certain circumstances, but the present circumstances (in the United States)
make it unjust. The costs of racial profiling for black communities in
the U.S. are much higher than Risse and Zeckhauer account for. Racial
profiling can make targeted individuals assume they have an inferior
political status, which can lead to an alienation from the state. This can make racial profiling turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy when an individual is more likely to commit a crime because they are perceived as a criminal.
Hosein also points to an epistemic problem. Arguments in favor of racial profiling are based on the premise that there is a correlation
between belonging to a specific racial group and committing certain
crimes. However, should such a correlation exist, it is based on data
that is skewed by previous racial profiling. Because more subjects of a
certain racial group were targeted, more crime was registered in this
group. It is therefore epistemically unjustified to assume that this
group commits more crime.
Canada
Accusations of racial profiling of visible minorities who accuse police of targeting them due to their ethnic background is a growing concern in Canada. In 2005, the Kingston Police released the first study ever in Canada which pertains to racial profiling. The study focused on the city of Kingston, Ontario,
a small city where most of the inhabitants are white. The study showed
that black-skinned people were 3.7 times more likely to be pulled over
by police than white-skinned people, while Asian and White people are
less likely to be pulled over than Black people.
Several police organizations condemned this study and suggested more
studies like this would make them hesitant to pull over visible
minorities.
Canadian Aboriginals are more likely to be charged with crimes, particularly on reserves.
The Canadian crime victimization survey does not collect data on the
ethnic origin of perpetrators, so comparisons between incidence of
victimizations and incidence of charging are impossible.
Although aboriginal persons make up 3.6% of Canada's population, they
account for 20% of Canada's prison population. This may show how racial
profiling increases effectiveness of police, or be a result of racial
profiling, as they are watched more intensely than others.
In February 2010, an investigation of the Toronto Star
daily newspaper found that black people across Toronto were three times
more likely to be stopped and documented by police than white people.
To a lesser extent, the same seemed true for people described by police
as having "brown" skin (South Asians, Arabs and Latinos). This was the result of an analysis of 1.7 million contact cards filled out by Toronto Police officers in the period 2003–2008.
The Ontario Human Rights Commission states that "police services
have acknowledged that racial profiling does occur and have taken [and
are taking] measures to address [the issue], including upgrading
training for officers, identifying officers at risk of engaging in
racial profiling, and improving community relations". Ottawa Police
addressed this issue and planned on implementing a new policy regarding
officer racially profiling persons, "the policy explicitly forbids
officers from investigating or detaining anyone based on their race and
will force officers to go through training on racial profiling". This policy was implemented after the 2008 incident where an African Canadian woman was strip searched by members of the Ottawa police. There is a video
showing the strip search where one witnesses the black woman being held
to the ground and then having her bra and shirt cut ripped/cut off by a
member of the Ottawa Police Force which was released to the viewing of
the public in 2010.
China
The Chinese government has been using a facial recognition surveillance technology, analysing physiognomical output of surveillance cameras to track and control Uyghurs, a Muslim minority in China's Western province of Xinjiang. The extent of the vast system was published in the spring of 2019 by the NYT who called it "automated racism".
In research projects aided by European institutions it has combined the
facial output with people's DNA, to create an ethnic profile. The DNA
was collected at the prison camps, which are interning more than one
million Uyghurs, as had been corroborated in November 2019 by data
leaks, such as the China Cables.
Germany
In
February 2012, the first court ruling concerning racial profiling in
German police policy, allowing police to use skin color and "non-German
ethnic origin" to select persons who will be asked for identification in
spot-checks for illegal immigrants. Subsequently, it was decided legal for a person submitted to a spot-check to compare the policy to that of the SS in public.
A higher court later overruled the earlier decision declaring the
racial profiling unlawful and in violation of anti-discrimination
provisions in Art. 3 Basic Law and the General Equal Treatment Act of
2006.
The civil rights organisation Büro zur Umsetzung von Gleichbehandlung
(Office for the Implementation of Equal Treatment) makes a distinction
between criminal profiling, which is legitimate in Germany, and ethnic
profiling, which is not.
According to a 2016 report by the Interior ministry in Germany, there had been an increase in hate crimes and violence against migrant groups in Germany. The reports concluded that there were more than 10 attacks per day against migrants in Germany in 2016.
This report from Germany garnered the attention of the United Nations,
which alleged that people of African descent face widespread
discrimination in Germany.
A 2017 statement by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Rights after a visit to Germany states: "While the Basic Law guarantees
equality, prohibits racial discrimination, and states that human dignity
is inviolable, it is not being enforced." and calls racial profiling by
police officials endemic. Recommendations include legal reform,
establishing an independent complaint system, training and continuing
education for the police, and investigations to promote accountability
and remedy.
Ethiopia
Ethnic profiling against Tigrayans occurred during the Tigray War that started in November 2020, with Ethiopians of Tigrayan ethnicity being put on indefinite leave from Ethiopian Airlines or refused permission to board, prevented from overseas travel,
and an "order of identifying ethnic Tigrayans from all government
agencies and NGOs" being used by federal police to request a list of
ethnic Tigrayans from an office of the World Food Programme. Tigrayans' houses were arbitrarily searched and Tigrayan bank accounts were suspended. Ethnic Tigrayan members of Ethiopian components of United Nations peacekeeping
missions were disarmed and some forcibly flown back to Ethiopia, at the
risk of torture or execution, according to United Nations officials.
Israel
In 1972, terrorists from the Japanese Red Army launched an attack that led to the deaths of at least 24 people at Ben Gurion Airport.
Since then, security at the airport has relied on a number of
fundamentals, including a heavy focus on what Raphael Ron, former
director of security at Ben Gurion, terms the "human factor", which he
generalized as "the inescapable fact that terrorist attacks are carried out by people who can be found and stopped by an effective security methodology."
As part of its focus on this so-called "human factor", Israeli security
officers interrogate travelers using racial profiling, singling out
those who appear to be Arab based on name or physical appearance.
Additionally, all passengers, including those who do not appear to be
of Arab descent, are questioned as to why they are traveling to Israel,
followed by several general questions about the trip in order to search
for inconsistencies. Although numerous civil rights groups have demanded an end to the profiling, the Israeli government maintains that it is both effective and unavoidable. According to Ariel Merari, an Israeli terrorism expert,
"it would be foolish not to use profiling when everyone knows that most
terrorists come from certain ethnic groups. They are likely to be Muslim and young, and the potential threat justifies inconveniencing a certain ethnic group."
Mexico
The
General Law on Population (Reglamento de la Ley General de Poblacion)
of 2000 in Mexico has been cited as being used to racially profile and
abuse immigrants to Mexico.
Mexican law makes illegal immigration punishable by law and allows law
officials great discretion in identifying and questioning illegal
immigrants. Mexico has been criticized for its immigration policy. Chris Hawley of USA Today
stated that "Mexico has a law that is no different from Arizona's",
referring to legislation which gives local police forces the power to
check documents of people suspected of being in the country illegally.
Immigration and human rights activists have also noted that Mexican
authorities frequently engage in racial profiling, harassment, and
shakedowns against migrants from Central America.
Sri Lanka
Ethnic Sri Lankan Tamils traveling from the Northern Province and Eastern Province in Sri Lanka have to compulsory register with the Police and mandatory carry a police certificate as per the Prevention of Terrorism Act and emergency regulations if found not living in the house in the certificate they could be arrested. In 2007 Tamils were expelled from Colombo. The move to expel these people drew wide criticism of the government. The United States
Embassy in Sri Lanka condemned the act, asking the government of Sri
Lanka to ensure the constitutional rights of all the citizens of the
country. Norway
also condemned the act, describing it as a clear violation of
international human rights law. Their press release urged government of
Sri Lanka to desist from any further enforced removals. Canada has also condemned the action. Human rights groups, Local think tank and other observers have termed this act as "ethnic cleansing". The media group said that this type of act reminds people of what "Hitler did to the Jews", and the Asian Center of Human Rights urged India to intervene.
Spain
Racial profiling by police forces in Spain is a common practice. A study by the University of Valencia, found that people of non-white aspect are up to ten times more likely to be stopped by the police on the street. Amnesty International accused Spanish authorities of using racial and ethnic profiling, with police singling out people who are not white in the street and public places.
In 2011, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD)
urged the Spanish government to take "effective measures" to ethnic
profiling, including the modification of existing laws and regulations
which permit its practice. In 2013, the UN Special Rapporteur,
Mutuma Ruteere, described the practice of ethnic profiling by Spanish
law enforcement officers "a persisting and pervasive problem". In 2014, the Spanish government approved a law which prohibited racial profiling by police forces.
United Kingdom
Racial
issues have been prevalent in the UK for a long time. For example,
following the Windrush influx of immigrants from the Caribbean and West
Indies following the Second World War, racial tensions began to flare up
in the country - see the Notting Hill Race Riot. The most recent statistics from the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford
in 2019 show that people born outside of the UK made up 14% of the UK's
population or 9.5 million people. Black Britons make up 3% of the
population and Indian Britons occupy 2.3% of the population with the
remainder being largely EU or North American migrants.
An increase in knife crime in the capital in recent decades has led to an increase in police stop and search
powers. However, there are concerns that these powers lead to
discrimination and racial profiling with statistics showing that there
were 54 stop and searches for every 1000 black people compared to just 6
for every 1000 white people. Following social dissatisfaction and claims of institutional racism, the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities published The report of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities in 2021, finding overall that there was no institutional racism in the UK.
The report and its findings were criticised by many including the
United Nations working group who argued that the report 'attempts to
normalise white supremacy' and could 'fuel racism'.
United States
In the United States, racial profiling is mainly used when referring to the disproportionate searching of
African Americans,
Asian Americans,
Hispanic and Latino Americans,
Middle Eastern Americans,
Native Americans, and
Pacific Islander Americans along with other visible minorities. According to an
American College of Physicians
study, 92% of Blacks, 78% of Latinxs, 75% of Native Americans, and 61%
of Asian Americans have "reported experiencing racial discrimination in
the form of racial slurs, violence, threats, and harassment." Racial profiling has roots in
slavery
and has grown with the rise of urbanization, conflated with
gentrification. The US harbors a sense of fear and danger in people of
color through the uncontested use of racial profiling in day-to-day
interactions - from personal implicit biases, overt and covert racist
laws and practices, and discriminatory law enforcement agencies.
Sociologist Robert Staples said that racial profiling in the U.S. is
"not merely a collection of individual offenses", but rather a systemic
phenomenon across American society, dating back to the
era of slavery.
"At the root of the emergence of the modern Anglo-American police was
the problem of changing social relations and conditions arising from
industrialization and
urbanization," says sociologist Dr. Tia Dafnos.
This is exemplified in the large wage and generational wealth gaps and
workplace and housing discrimination that exists between the White and
non-White populations.
Racial profiling in policing institutions is not new, either. The
modern American police force has taken inspiration and structure from
slave patrols
and as a result we observe that people in minority populations report
high rates of unfair treatment by courts, unreasonable arrests and
frisking, and hesitancy to call the police in times of need out of fear of discrimination. The US Constitution's
Fourth Amendment, which protects citizens from unreasonable
search and seizure, was extended after a run of controversial
court cases in the 1960s
in which people of color were facing higher rates of frisking and
intimidation. This extension says that police must obey the law while
enforcing it. Although the Supreme Court has claimed continued adherence to objectivity in the face of Fourth Amendment cases,
American police employ racial profiling with harmful consequences.
Recent incidents of racial profiling, often in mundane situations like
traffic stops, have resulted in unnecessary violence and deaths. Data
suggest that "African American and American Indian/Alaska Native women
and men are killed by the police at higher rates" than their White
counterparts, and Latinx men are killed at higher rates than White men.
African American men are 2.5 times more likely to be killed by police
than White men. Unlawful and wrongful death in the cases of
George Floyd and
Sonya Massey have been attributed to extreme racial profiling and met with social media outburst and growing attention towards the
Black Lives Matter and
Say Her Name movements. The
Terry vs. Ohio
court case of 1968 allows police officers to stop an individual or
vehicle without probable cause if they think and individual is
committing a crime or about to commit a crime (needs reasonable
articulable suspicion), has also led to countless incidents of racial
profiling in the US. Most of the time, it is hard to racially profile
when you can't even see in the car, relating to the
Driving while black
phenomenon that draws from data that supports that people of color
disproportionately experience police shootings, traffic stops, searches,
and arrests.