PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Law professor argues for removing police from traffic enforcement

A new legal framework could enhance public safety and equal treatment by eliminating 'pretextual' traffic stops, which have been tied to cases of police abuse and injustice

Law professor argues for removing police from traffic enforcement
2021-04-22
(Press-News.org) University of Arkansas law professor Jordan Blair Woods challenges the conventional wisdom that only police can enforce traffic laws.

In "Traffic Without Police," to be published in Stanford Law Review, Woods articulates a new legal framework for traffic enforcement, one that separates it from critical police functions, such as preventing and deterring crime, conducting criminal investigations and responding to emergencies.

If not the police, who then would enforce traffic laws? As Woods explains, jurisdictions would delegate most traffic enforcement to newly created traffic agencies. These public offices would operate independently from police departments and would hire their own traffic monitors to conduct and oversee traffic enforcement, including stops. Police officers would become involved in traffic stops only for serious violations that are a criminal offense or public threat.

"Traffic stops are the most frequent interaction between police and civilians today," Woods said. "And because we know traffic enforcement is a common gateway for funneling over-policed and marginalized communities into the criminal justice system, these stops are a persistent source of racial and economic injustice."

Previous research has shown that Black and Latinx motorists are disproportionately stopped by police for traffic violations. Compared to white motorists, these minority groups are also disproportionately questioned, frisked, searched, cited and arrested during traffic stops.

Many of these stops and intrusions are considered "pretextual," according to legal definition, meaning that they enable officers to initiate contact with motorists and to then search for evidence of non-traffic crime without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. In this sense, the traffic stop has functioned as a gateway unfairly targeting Black and Latinx motorists. Pretextual stops sometimes also lead to police mistreatment and abuse.

So far, there is one example of the reorganization that Woods articulates. In July 2020, as part of a comprehensive plan to make structural police reforms, the city of Berkeley, California, voted in favor of a proposal that removes police from conducting traffic stops. The proposal directs the city to create a transportation department staffed by unarmed civil servants who would be in charge of enforcing traffic laws. Other municipalities are considering similar reforms that would remove police from traffic enforcement to varying degrees.

In addition to the social benefits mentioned above, especially for minority communities, removing police from traffic enforcement and adopting traffic law reforms that Woods proposes could put an end to unfair and often subjective reliance on traffic ticket revenue to fund state and local budgets. Likewise, such reform could reduce or eliminate financial and professional incentives that contribute to aggressive and biased traffic enforcement, namely prohibiting the issuing of traffic tickets as a measure of professional performance.

INFORMATION:

Woods' study can be downloaded at SSRN.

Woods is the faculty director of the Richard B. Atkinson LGBTQ Law & Policy Program at the University of Arkansas School of Law.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Law professor argues for removing police from traffic enforcement

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Taking down human traffickers through online ads

2021-04-22
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and McGill University have adapted an algorithm first developed to spot anomalies in data, like typos in patient information at hospitals or errant figures in accounting, to identify similarities across escort ads. The algorithm scans and clusters similarities in text and could help law enforcement direct their investigations and better identify human traffickers and their victims, said Christos Faloutsos, the Fredkin Professor in Artificial Intelligence at CMU's School of Computer Science, who led the team. "Our algorithm can put the millions of advertisements together and highlight the common parts," Faloutsos said. "If they have a lot of things in common, it's not guaranteed, but it's highly likely that it ...

Life satisfaction among young people linked to collectivism

2021-04-22
An international group of scientists from Italy, the USA, China and Russia have studied the relationship between collectivism, individualism and life satisfaction among young people aged 18-25 in four countries. They found that the higher the index of individualistic values at the country level, the higher the life satisfaction of young people's lives. At the individual level, however, collectivism was more significant for young people. In all countries, young people found a positive association between collectivism, particularly with regard to family ties, and life satisfaction. This somewhat contradicts and at the same time clarifies the results ...

Use of e-cigarettes plus tobacco cigarettes linked to higher risk of respiratory symptoms

2021-04-22
BOSTON - Exclusively using (or "vaping") e-cigarettes can help people quit smoking, but many people using e-cigarettes to quit smoking continue to smoke cigarettes. New research led by investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) reveals that respiratory symptoms--such as cough and wheeze--are more likely to develop when people use both e-cigarettes and tobacco cigarettes together compared with using either one alone. The findings are published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, the flagship journal of the American Thoracic Society. The ...

Ancient Indigenous forest gardens promote a healthy ecosystem: SFU study

Ancient Indigenous forest gardens promote a healthy ecosystem: SFU study
2021-04-22
A new study by Simon Fraser University historical ecologists finds that Indigenous-managed forests--cared for as "forest gardens"--contain more biologically and functionally diverse species than surrounding conifer-dominated forests and create important habitat for animals and pollinators. The findings are published today in Ecology and Society. According to researchers, ancient forests were once tended by Ts'msyen and Coast Salish peoples living along the north and south Pacific coast. These forest gardens continue to grow at remote archaeological villages on Canada's northwest coast and are composed ...

Hungry fruit flies are extreme ultramarathon fliers

Hungry fruit flies are extreme ultramarathon fliers
2021-04-22
In 2005, an ultramarathon runner ran continuously 560 kilometers (350 miles) in 80 hours, without sleeping or stopping. This distance was roughly 324,000 times the runner's body length. Yet this extreme feat pales in comparison to the relative distances that fruit flies can travel in a single flight, according to new research from Caltech. Caltech scientists have now discovered that fruit flies can fly up to 15 kilometers (about 9 miles) in a single journey--6 million times their body length, or the equivalent of over 10,000 kilometers for the average human. In comparison to body length, this is further than many migratory species of birds can fly in a day. To discover this, the team conducted experiments in a dry lakebed ...

Pregnant women with COVID-19 face high mortality rate

2021-04-22
In a worldwide study of 2,100 pregnant women, those who contracted COVID-19 during pregnancy were 20 times more likely to die than those who did not contract the virus. UW Medicine and University of Oxford doctors led this first-of-its-kind study, published today in JAMA Pediatrics. The investigation involved more than 100 researchers and pregnant women from 43 maternity hospitals in 18 low-, middle- and high-income nations; 220 of the women received care in the United States, 40 at UW Medicine. The research was conducted between April and August of 2020. The study is unique because each woman affected by COVID-19 was compared with two uninfected pregnant women who gave birth during the same span in the same hospital. Aside ...

Machine learning model generates realistic seismic waveforms

Machine learning model generates realistic seismic waveforms
2021-04-22
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., April 22, 2021--A new machine-learning model that generates realistic seismic waveforms will reduce manual labor and improve earthquake detection, according to a study published recently in JGR Solid Earth. "To verify the e?cacy of our generative model, we applied it to seismic ?eld data collected in Oklahoma," said Youzuo Lin, a computational scientist in Los Alamos National Laboratory's Geophysics group and principal investigator of the project. "Through a sequence of qualitative and quantitative tests and benchmarks, we saw that our model can generate high-quality synthetic waveforms and improve machine learning-based earthquake detection algorithms." Quickly and accurately detecting earthquakes can be a challenging task. Visual detection done ...

Study paves the way for new photosensitive materials

Study paves the way for new photosensitive materials
2021-04-22
Photocatalysts are useful materials, with a myriad of environmental and energy applications, including air purification, water treatment, self-cleaning surfaces, pollution-fighting paints and coatings, hydrogen production and CO2 conversion to sustainable fuels. An efficient photocatalyst converts light energy into chemical energy and provides this energy to a reacting substance, to help chemical reactions occur. One of the most useful such materials is knows as titanium oxide or titania, much sought after for its stability, effectiveness as a photocatalyst ...

Reprogramming fibroblasts could result in scar-free wound healing, suggests study in mice

2021-04-22
Researchers have determined a way to potentially minimize or eliminate scarring in wounded skin, by further decoding the scar-promoting role of a specific class of dermal fibroblast cells in mice. By preventing these cells from expressing the transcription factor Engrailed-1 (En-1), Shamik Mascharak and colleagues reprogrammed these cells to take on a different identity, capable of regenerating wounded skin - including the restoration of structures such as hair follicles and sweat glands that are absent in scarred skin tissue. With further development and testing, their discovery could lead to therapies to reduce or completely avoid scarring ...

China requires switch to zero-carbon energy to achieve more ambitious Paris Agreement goal, models S

2021-04-22
A new multi-model analysis suggests that China will need to reduce its carbon emissions by over 90% and its energy consumption by almost 40%, in order to meet the more ambitious target set by the 2016 Paris Agreement. The Agreement called for no more than a 1.5°Celsius (C) global temperature rise by 2050. These results provide a clear directive for China to deploy multiple strategies at once for long-term emission mitigation, the authors say. The findings also highlight the need for more research on the economic consequences of working toward a 1.5°C warming limit, arguing that current studies are far from adequate to inform the sixth assessment report (AR 6) on climate change planned for release by the United Nations' Intergovernmental ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Climate policies can backfire by eroding “green” values, study finds

Too much screen time too soon? A*STAR study links infant screen exposure to brain changes and teen anxiety

Global psychiatry mourns Professor Dan Stein, visionary who transformed mental health science across Africa and beyond

KIST develops eco-friendly palladium recovery technology to safeguard resource security

Statins significantly reduce mortality risk for adults with diabetes, regardless of cardiovascular risk

Brain immune cells may drive more damage in females than males with Alzheimer’s

Evidence-based recommendations empower clinicians to manage epilepsy in pregnancy

Fungus turns bark beetles’ defenses against them

There are new antivirals being tested for herpesviruses. Scientists now know how they work

CDI scientist, colleagues author review of global burden of fungus Candida auris

How does stroke influence speech comprehension?

B cells transiently unlock their plasticity, risking lymphoma development

Advanced AI dodel predicts spoken language outcomes in deaf children after cochlear implants

Multimodal imaging-based cerebral blood flow prediction model development in simulated microgravity

Accelerated streaming subgraph matching framework is faster, more robust, and scalable

Gestational diabetes rose every year in the US since 2016

OHSU researchers find breast cancer drug boosts leukemia treatment

Fear and medical misinformation regarding risk of progression or recurrence among patients with breast cancer

Glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonists and asthma risk in adolescents with obesity

Reviving dormant immunity: Millimeter waves reprogram the immunosuppressive microenvironment to potentiate immunotherapy without obvious side effects

Safety decision-making for autonomous vehicles integrating passenger physiological states by fNIRS

Fires could emit more air pollution than previously estimated

A new way to map how cells choose their fate

Numbers in our sights affect how we perceive space

SIMJ announces global collaborative book project in commemoration of its 75th anniversary

Air pollution exposure and birth weight

Obstructive sleep apnea risk and mental health conditions among older adults

How talking slows eye movements behind the wheel

The Ceramic Society of Japan’s Oxoate Ceramics Research Association launches new international book project

Heart-brain connection: international study reveals the role of the vagus nerve in keeping the heart young

[Press-News.org] Law professor argues for removing police from traffic enforcement
A new legal framework could enhance public safety and equal treatment by eliminating 'pretextual' traffic stops, which have been tied to cases of police abuse and injustice