Policing Race and Technology

Please join the Brennan Center for Justice and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund for a full-day symposium on December 3, 2019. This convening aims to center the racial justice issues raised by modern surveillance technologies such as facial recognition, predictive policing, and social media monitoring tools.

Through panels and discussion, this symposium will explore topics such as:

  • The deployment of surveillance technologies in the face of well-documented error rates when analyzing communities of color, and the ways in which their unchecked use threatens to obscure and automate racial inequalities under the guise of unbiased computer systems;
  • The need to analyze the use of surveillance tools in the context of well-established racial biases in policing, which has knock-on effects on the criminal justice system;
  • Issues raised by using surveillance technologies in tandem, such as their exacerbated impact on communities of color and the creation of a pervasive dragnet that is incompatible with a democratic society; and
  • The different approaches to regulation, including outright bans (enacted for facial recognition in cities such as San Francisco and Somerville, MA), efforts to pass transparency measures (enacted in cities such as Seattle and Nashville, TN), and the role of inspector general audits (influential reports in Los Angeles and Chicago).

This discussion will feature:

  • Kade Crockford – Director, Technology for Liberty Program, ACLU of Massachusetts
  • Victor Dempsey – Community Organizer, Legal Aid Society
  • McKenzie Funk – Journalist and Author
  • Brian Hofer – Chair, City of Oakland’s Privacy Advisory Committee
  • Deborah Raji – Technology Fellow, AI Now
  • Rashida Richardson – Director of Policy Research, AI Now
  • Ali Winston – Investigative Reporter

Co-sponsored by the Brennan Center for Justice and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund

9:00 am: Doors open / breakfast and registration
9:30 am – 3:00 pm: Program (lunch included)











When: Tue., Dec. 3, 2019 at 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
Where: NYU School of Law
40 Washington Square S.
212-998-6040
Price: Free
Buy tickets/get more info now
See other events in these categories:

Please join the Brennan Center for Justice and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund for a full-day symposium on December 3, 2019. This convening aims to center the racial justice issues raised by modern surveillance technologies such as facial recognition, predictive policing, and social media monitoring tools.

Through panels and discussion, this symposium will explore topics such as:

  • The deployment of surveillance technologies in the face of well-documented error rates when analyzing communities of color, and the ways in which their unchecked use threatens to obscure and automate racial inequalities under the guise of unbiased computer systems;
  • The need to analyze the use of surveillance tools in the context of well-established racial biases in policing, which has knock-on effects on the criminal justice system;
  • Issues raised by using surveillance technologies in tandem, such as their exacerbated impact on communities of color and the creation of a pervasive dragnet that is incompatible with a democratic society; and
  • The different approaches to regulation, including outright bans (enacted for facial recognition in cities such as San Francisco and Somerville, MA), efforts to pass transparency measures (enacted in cities such as Seattle and Nashville, TN), and the role of inspector general audits (influential reports in Los Angeles and Chicago).

This discussion will feature:

  • Kade Crockford – Director, Technology for Liberty Program, ACLU of Massachusetts
  • Victor Dempsey – Community Organizer, Legal Aid Society
  • McKenzie Funk – Journalist and Author
  • Brian Hofer – Chair, City of Oakland’s Privacy Advisory Committee
  • Deborah Raji – Technology Fellow, AI Now
  • Rashida Richardson – Director of Policy Research, AI Now
  • Ali Winston – Investigative Reporter

Co-sponsored by the Brennan Center for Justice and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund

9:00 am: Doors open / breakfast and registration
9:30 am – 3:00 pm: Program (lunch included)

Buy tickets/get more info now