This article explains the race conditioning of the police officers and how that leads to racial profiling in communities. Stewart further examinees information gathered from the community residents. He questions the accuracy of the different racial perspectives. Stewart explains past police to citizen relationships makes people either avoid interactions with the police or not comply with police officers. Stewart offers solutions to fix the police to citizen relation. Based off the African Americans experiences with polices, he thinks that changing policies will not change much. Stewart suggests more police involvement with the citizens to gain trust between the two. That police should create partnerships with the citizens to police the neighborhoods. Stewarts tells his readers to research more into the subject of racial profiling to improve racial bias for both parties. Stewarts’s article is a scholarly source for an analysis of Brunson’s “Police Don’t like Black People.” This article does not show any …show more content…
Geiger-Oneto and Phillips surveyed undergraduate students at a very diverse college. The survey was about their experiences with the police. The survey was to show difference in police procedures based of race, sex, and social status. The results of the study shows police are biased base off those three things. The studies show black people are more targeted in stops, frisk, searches, and receiving a ticket than their white counterparts. Then it shows that white men and women are more likely to have drugs in their car than black men and women. Stats show that people with prior arrest are more likely to experience social control than people with clean records. Drawing on Black 's (1976) is used in the article to give reasoning of police prejudices. This article does not show bias to either side. This article shows racial profiling while driving as a black