Back International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination – Launch of the ICC Manual on community policing

The Intercultural Cities (ICC) programme launches a Manual on community policing to mark 21 March, the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination – Launch of the ICC Manual on community policing

Europe’s social structure has become more and more diverse: its citizens have plural identities, different ethnic origins, religions, identities, sexual orientations, and social classes. Yet, while diversity could be managed as a strength to make societies more dynamic, prosperous, and creative, we are witnessing a rise in racism and xenophobia, hate speech against migrants and minorities, islamophobia, and the spreading across Europe of political rhetoric based on the defence of fixed national identity defined by ethnicity and traditions.

Conflicts which may stem from cultural relativism, fear, or suspicion towards “the other”, as well as discrimination, racism and hate incidents, are challenges that the police services and the public authorities of intercultural cities have to manage. In order to support local police and other enforcement agencies better adapt to the diverse society they serve, the ICC programme has launched a Manual on Intercultural Community Policing. The latter is a policing strategy that develops an approach to surveillance and prevention based on ties and mutual trust, by engaging citizens in defining community-based and public space safety solutions. It is therefore mainly founded on core principles of interculturalism and establishes a strong connection between safety and care.

The Manual provides local police, including high-rank police managers, public safety directors, managers, and decision makers, with guidance to implement policing principles to design new procedures, protocols, structures and specialised units in their police community, to effectively address the challenges that diversity may pose to the achievement of peaceful coexistence, in the medium and long term.

Manual on Community Policing >>


The ICC programme and anti-discrimination

The holistic and inclusive integration model promoted by the ICC programme requires the implementation of comprehensive policies to eliminate inequalities and discrimination at the local level, so to achieve peaceful coexistence, mutual trust, and full participation of citizens from all origins and backgrounds, in all aspects of social and civic life. In terms of governance of anti-discrimination, in addition to setting-up legal and administrative structures to support victims, detect and suggest remedy to systemic discrimination, ICC member cities do also believe that non-discriminatory practices must be instilled through proactive processes of education and exchange, leading to attitudinal and behavioural change. The ICC programme helps them to dispense an urban pedagogy of human rights, intercultural dialogue & cultural pluralism, and to foster the intercultural competence of their public and elected officials.

Strasbourg, France 21 March 2019
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