BLACK & BLUE TOGETHER
Black & Blue Together: Color, Perceptions, and Policing is an innovative humanities discussion program for law enforcement professionals and high school students that encourages both groups to better understand the living experiences of young people and police officers.
Through facilitated discussions of social media, music, poetry, drama, art, fiction, and nonfiction that illuminate issues central to living and policing in communities of color, Black & Blue Together promotes empathy and understanding and provides police officers and young people with an opportunity to reflect on their lives, perceptions, actions, and relationships through the lens of the humanities. This can have a significant effect on the way young people and law enforcement professionals in communities of color understand and act towards each other through positive interactions between young people and law enforcement.
Black & Blue Together will serve as a pilot for further community conversation across New Jersey to engage audiences in meaningful conversation about the roles perceptions play in our lives as citizens of New Jersey, the United States, and the world.
Using the humanities to confront and challenge perceptions based in stereotypes and misinformation, while building positive relationships between young people and law enforcement to overcome historically, negative interactions that have resulted in distrust, a lack of respect and violence on both sides.
Offering young people and law enforcement an opportunity to network, connect, and understand one another.
Improving young people’s and law enforcement’s understanding of how to handle encounters with one another.
NJCH is piloting Black & Blue Together in Newark, Bridgeton, and Paterson as a series of five discussion sessions over five months in each location.
- Partners: The Urban League of Essex County and the Newark Police Department
- Scholar/Facilitator: Cheryl Anne Kennedy, M.D., Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Rutgers Medical School; and Dr. Ronnie Boseman
- Partners: The Bronze Shields of Passaic County; the Paterson Free Public Library; Youth Services Bureau of Paterson’s Department of Health and Human Services
- Scholar/Facilitator: Mia Bay, Ph.D., Professor of History and Associate Director of the Center for Race and Ethnicity at Rutgers University New Brunswick
- Program dates: September to January
- Partners: Mayor Albert Kelly; Police Chief Michael Gaimari; the Gateway Community Action Partnership
- Scholar/Facilitator: Donnetrice Allison, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Communication Studies and Africana Studies and coordinator for the Africana Studies Program at Stockton University
- Program Dates: September to January