i don't accept the premise that reducing arrests first, while i'm natural, all those cities have reduced arrest as certainly seattl and new york have. But if we look at san francisco, i was watching the movie dirty harry a week ago, said, in nineteen seventy one in san francisco city was much cleaner in terms of problems on the street. Although crime was higher, it seemed to work much better. There are now cases of people, maybe homeless people, just going at t stores, taking things knowing they won't be arrested. The game is unlivable. Why don't the police there? Simply need to be much tougher. You'd have to convince...
Long before becoming a legal scholar focused on police reform, Rachel Harmon studied engineering at MIT and graduate philosophy at LSE. “You could call it a random walk,” she says, “or you could say that I’m really interested in the structure of things.” But despite her experience and training, even she can’t identify a single point of leverage that can radically reform the complicated system of policing in America. “We have been struggling with balancing the harms and benefits of policing since we started contemporary departments, so I don’t think that we’re going to suddenly fix this by flipping one lever.”
She joined Tyler to discuss the best ideas for improving policing, including why good data on policing is so hard to come by, why body cams are not a panacea, the benefits and costs of consolidating police departments, why more female cops won’t necessarily reduce the use of force, how federal programs can sometimes misfire, where changing police selection criteria would and wouldn’t help, whether some policing could be replaced by social workers, the sobering frequency of sexual assaults by police, how a national accreditation system might improve police conduct, what reformers can learn from Camden and elsewhere, and more. They close by discussing the future of law schools, what she learned clerking under Guido Calabresi and Stephen Breyer, why she’s drawn to kickboxing and triathlons, and what two things she looks for in a young legal scholar.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded June 8th, 2020 Other ways to connect