Transcript PPT

Gillian Dutton
Associate Professor of Lawyering Skills, Director, Externship
Program, Korematsu Center Fellow
Ronald A. Peterson Law Clinic
1215 E. Columbia, Law Annex
P O Box 222000
Seattle, WA 98122-4340
t 206-398-4010 | f 206-398-4136
[email protected]
30% of workers heard colleagues use
racial/ethnic slurs in past 12 months
30% report sexist comments in same time
21% of workers overheard age-related ridicule
20% report comments about sexual orientation
1 in 10 students report derogatory term re race,
religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation in
past 6 months
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Evaluation of evidence
◦ Bias in gathering of evidence – more
confessions, accusatory
interrogation
Client meeting
◦ Greater physical distance
◦ More speech errors
◦ Ending meeting early
◦ Hostility toward client
◦ Reduced credibility
Acceptance of punishment
◦ Implicit dehumanization
◦ Features based implicit bias impact
in death penalty cases
Richardson, L. Song and Goff, Phillip Atiba, Implicit Racial Bias in
Public Defender Triage (March 1, 2013). Yale Law Journal, Vol. 122,
2013; U Iowa Legal Studies Research Paper No. 13-24. Available at
SSRN:http://ssrn.com/abstract=2259079
http://www.uclalawreview.org/?p=3576
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Unprecedented globalization
and immigration
Interactions between native
and non-native speakers are
rapidly increasing
Number of international migrants-191
million
Number residing in English speaking
countries - 54 million
Number of non-native speakers of English
–
More than 1 billion
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Preference for native accent emerges
in infants as early as 5 months of age
Children in US and in France prefer to
be friends with children who speak
with a native accent
Research appears to show these
preferences may hold true for all
languages
Lack of accent is not the
same as fluency
The Way They Speak: A Social Psychological
Review Perspective on the Stigma of Nonnative
Accents in Communication, Gluszek and Dovidio
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Less intelligent
Less loyal
Less competent
Lazy (false belief
that accents are
within the
speaker’s control)
Speaking the
language poorly
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Research shows adaptation to accented
speech occurs in a short time
Some studies show over-correction in explicit
bias despite implicit bias showing
discrimination
Measuring Implicit and Explicit Attitudes
Toward Foreign Accented Speech
Journal of Language and Social Psychology
2013 32: 3 Andrew J. Pantos and Andrew W.
Perkins
It is well known that people don't always
‘speak their minds’
 New research shows that people don’t
always ‘know their minds’
 Called the Implicit Association Test, or IAT
https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/
 This method demonstrates the consciousunconscious divergences in response
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Weapons
Native American
Weight
Sexuality (Gay-Straight)
Asian American
Arab-Muslim
Race (Black-White)
Gender-Career
Age (Young-Old)
Disability
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Prejudiced' = endorse or approve of negative
attitudes and discriminatory behavior toward
various out-groups
Biases registered on IAT may not be
consciously endorsed, or may be
contradictory to intentional attitudes/beliefs
Individuals may function in a non-prejudiced
fashion with active effort to prevent
discriminatory behavior
Relaxing these active efforts, people may
show discrimination in thought or behavior
Embark on
consciously
planned actions
to compensate
for known
unconscious
beliefs.
Identifying
mechanisms
for
changing
automatic
preferences
is an active
research
question.
Automatic
preferences,
automatic
as they are,
are also
malleable!
Think of an • 1. How might the incident
affect people involved? (target,
experience with perpetrator, witnesses)
bias against an LEP• 2. How might the incident
affect the community?
individual
• 3. What are emotional, social,
physical and financial costs ?
We all face difficulty in
responding to bias
• 4. Why do we often not respond?
• 5. Barriers include power,
familiarity, emotional connection
Why is it so hard?
Depending on where you
stand you may experience:
◦ Hurt
◦ Anger
◦ Withdrawal
What makes us anxious?
Or
◦ Fear/Discomfort
What do you fear could happen?
◦ Guilt
◦ Denial
What could be good about having
these conversations?
Invisible backpack of
white privilege
https://www.isr.umich.e
du/home/diversity/reso What are the costs of avoiding?
urces/whiteCan we learn this skill for our work?
privilege.pdf
Move from “message to deliver”
to “some information to share and some
questions to ask”
Understand what has happened from the
other person’s point of view
 Explain your point of view
 Share and understand feelings
 Work together to figure out a way to
manage the problem going forward
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I don’t know if you know how that sounded, but
the way it sounded to me is that you think. . .
(identify hurtful bias).
I used to think I was able to put biases aside, but
then I realized that many of these behaviors are
unconscious … (describe your own experience
similar to the behavior witnessed)
Help me to understand what you meant by…
(insert statement)
Focus on
empathy
What
language will
you use?
Adjust the
presentation
to the
setting?
• Appeal to
principles
Separate out
intent
• Describe
impact and
set limits
• Acknowledge
your own bias
1.Explore prior miscommunication due to
culture/bias
2. Identify cultural preferences in
communication
3. Educate providers and community about
implicit bias
4. Provide experiences to undo or reverse the
experience that created the bias
5. Remain alert to bias and recognize it may
intrude into judgments/actions
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VGbwNI6Ssk
(Ted Talk)
Susan Bryant, The Five Habits: Building CrossCultural Competence in Lawyers, 8 CLINICAL L. REV. 33
(2001).
Nelson Miller, Beyond Bias -- Cultural Competence as
a Lawyer Skill, 87 MICH. B. J. 38 (2008).
Ascanio Piomelli, Cross-Cultural Lawyering by the
Book: The Latest Clinical Texts and A Sketch Of a
Future Agenda, 4 HASTINGS RACE & POVERTY L.J. 131
(2006
D.W. Sue, et al., Racial Microaggressions in Everyday
Life, AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST (May-June 2007).
Thank you and good luck. This is
important work!