Cultural differences
But it’s not just speaking the language that has metro Atlanta
law enforcement agencies scrambling to get a handle on the needs of their
new residents.
Cultural differences can cover everything from one immigrant’s imported
distrust of authority figures to another’s bristling when touched
on the back of the head.
Even different attitudes toward gender roles emerge as officers patrol
diversifying neighborhoods.
“As a female officer, you might meet people with a different idea
of what women should be,” said Gwinnett Police Sgt. Sandra Pryor,
a 15-year veteran of the force.
Pryor is charged with spreading diversity training around Gwinnett. On
a recent day she delivered a two-hour class in cultural diversity to nearly
half of the 47 people working for the city of Lilburn. She offered her
students an example of the difference between having a prejudice — which
she says is something we all have to some degree — and acting on
it.
Not long ago, she said, she was assisting the Immigration and Naturalization
Service in a search for undocumented residents along Brook Hollow Parkway
near Norcross. Her directions were to stop people who looked like Mexicans,
but that seemed too close to racial profiling for her taste.
“I stopped everybody,” she said. “When we act on prejudice,
we engage in discrimination.”
Hall, in the district attorney’s office, said the agency’s
language program outreach also is creating a better working relationship
between law enforcement and people who are suspicious of officers arriving
in a squad car.
“It’s helped to build a bridge,” he said. “A lot
of people come from countries where they had reason to fear the authorities.”