Discriminatory use of police stop-and search powers in London, UK.
Date
2013
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Vathek Publishing.
Abstract
Black Londoners have complained over the years
of being overpoliced and harassed by police
officers. The history of such contentious encounters
between members of the Black community and
the police service dates back to the 1970s, an era
that was characterised by the implementation of
the ‘Suspicion Laws’, popularly referred to as the
‘Sus Laws’, which emanated from the legislation
of the Vagrancy Act of 1824. It was an era most
Black people would prefer not to talk about
because of the oppressive encounters they experienced
with the police. This paper has three
purposes: first, to highlight the history of police
abuses of power in relation to dealing with Black
Londoners in a discriminatory way; second, to
explore the issue of societal racism, facilitated by
the trio of concepts of prejudice, stereotyping and
racial discrimination; third, to encourage the
debate on police accountability by discouraging
the discriminatory policing that permeates UK
society.
Description
Keywords
Discrimination.