A Special Offer - New Issue Guide about "Safety and Justice"

Blog Category: 

  • Safety and Justice

A SPECIAL OFFER IN SUPPORT OF A PUBLIC VOICE 2017

In order to promote forums on this issue - Safety and Justice: How Should Communities Reduce Violence -  for the Kettering Foundation’s annual report to policymakers in Washington DC,  the National Issues Forums Institute (NIFI )is making the PDF of this issue guide FREE to download for anyone convening forums from January 1, 2017 - May 9, 2017.

In addition, Kettering and NIFI are also partnering to offer 20 FREE copies of the printed issue guides + a starter video to the first 100 moderators who sign up to hold forums
 between January 1, 2017 - March 15, 2017.


If you hold a forum using the free materials, please submit a moderator report and have the forum participants complete the post-forum questionnaire to ensure the insights from your community are captured in the report.

 

The following is excerpted from the issue guide: 

After falling steadily for decades, the rate of violent crime in the United States rose again in 2015 and 2016. Interactions between citizens and police too often end in violence. People are increasingly worried about safety in their communities.

Many Americans are concerned that something is going on with violence in communities, law enforcement, and race that is undermining the national ideals of safety and justice for all.

It is unclear what is driving the recent rise in violence, but bias and distrust on all sides appear to be making the problem worse. Citizens and police need goodwill and cooperation in order to ensure safety and justice. For many people of color, the sense that they are being treated unfairly by law enforcement—and even being targeted by police—is palpable. Others say police departments are being blamed for the actions of a few individuals and that the dangers, stress, and violence law enforcement officers face in their work is underestimated. Still others hold that if we cannot find ways to defuse potentially violent interactions between citizens and police, we will never be able to create safe communities in which all people can thrive and feel welcomed and comfortable.

How should we ensure that Americans of every race and background are treated with respect and fairness? What should we do to ensure that the police have the support they need to fairly enforce the law? To what degree do racial and other forms of bias distort the justice system? What should we do as citizens to help reduce violence of all kinds in our communities and the nation as a whole?

How should communities increase safety while at the same time ensuring justice? This issue guide is a framework for citizens to work through these important questions together. It offers three different options for deliberation, each rooted in different, widely shared concerns and different ways of looking at the problem. The resulting conversation may be difficult, as it will necessarily involve tensions between things people hold deeply valuable, such as a collective sense of security, fair treatment for everyone, and personal freedom. No one option is the “correct” one; each includes drawbacks and trade-offs that we will have to face if we are to make progress on this issue. They are not the only options available. They are presented as a starting point for deliberation.

Option One: Enforce the Law Together
Expand policing while strengthening community-police partnerships.

Option Two: Apply the Law Fairly
Remove injustices, reform inequities, and improve accountability.

Option Three: De-escalate and Prevent Violence
Address the causes of violence and take direct actions to disrupt conflict.