ipl-logo

Summary Of Michael Coyle's Suppositions

714 Words3 Pages

Michael Coyle feels that the study of language leads a person to have a greater understanding of the link between crime and race (Paynich & Hill video, 2014). Coyle’s suppositions that those in criminal justice racialize their language and that everyday language not only criminalizes people of color, but it also builds and maintains a racist form of criminal justice system including practices, even while acknowledging that there is a problem of race when crime and criminal justice is concerned (Paynich & Hill video, 2014). According to Coyle, when those in the criminal justice field talk about racial prejudice it usually ends up placing race and crime together and therefore causes a link between crime and people of color whether it is done …show more content…

Unconsciously officers will associate poverty with crime. I believe that they unconsciously relate people of color with criminal behavior. The fact that some people of color have made statements such as was made on national TV that a young man of color should not have been shot robbing a white woman’s home for the second time because that was the way he paid for his college tuition and books. This type of attitude and statements places negative thoughts in people’s minds especially …show more content…

We as humans, will often demonstrate racial discrimination whether it is a white person toward a person of color or a color person toward a white person, it is in our subconscious. It will decrease over time as the racial gap closes. Some people of color are also guilty of associating crime with their race, so I do not feel it is just the white race.
Critical race theory challenges the ways race and racial power are constructed by law and culture (Critical race theory, n.d.). Critical theorists feel that the law is not neutral but instead is part of the problem. Critical race theorists fault critical legal scholars at failing to develop much that will attract people of color and for neglecting the transformative the rights discourse in social movements (Critical race theory,

Open Document