2008 Annual Report  

Organization Name:

Amicus

Organization Location:

15 South 5th Street, Suite 1100
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402

Organization Contact:

Phone: (612) 348-8570
Email(s): kathy@amicususa.org
Website: www.amicususa.org

Purpose:

to maintain the momentum of the Saint Paul Effective Diversity Partnerships in Policing and create an engaged team of white men and people of color working together for racial healing and improved equity around policing

Amount Requested:

$400,000

Status:

Applicant

Start Date - End Date:

4/1/2010 - 10/31/2011

Approach/Strategy:

Civic Engagement, Training, Race-Relations

Geographic Focus:

Minnesota

Project Name:

Effective Diversity Partnerships in Policing

Project Summary:

Taking on the task of racial healing around issues of policing, the Saint Paul Effective Diversity Partnerships in Policing project is a multi-year collaborative initiative of the Saint Paul Police Department (SPPD), Amicus, and University of St. Thomas and Metropolitan State University researchers. The project began in 2007, with a small yet hugely successful pilot of the diversity training model, White Men as Full Diversity Partners. In a department where previous diversity training efforts had been perceived very negatively, all groups of officers – white men, women, and individuals of color – reported that the training had been a positive experience and made a difference in their attitudes and interactions with fellow officers and the public.

Funding is sought for an expanded pilot, providing training and follow-up groups to participants, including officers, local corporate leaders, as well as local leaders and activists from Saint Paul’s communities of color. This expansion will increase community awareness of this method of engaging white men in diversity issues, engage companies to participate along with officers in the full-scale training rollout, and create a cadre of business leaders, community leaders and police officers to serve as effective diversity partner-leaders to promote racial healing around difficult policing issues. At the close of the project, participants will reunite during a summit to share the findings and plan racial healing activities - creating better solutions for open dialogue and helping to create effective diversity partnerships in policing.

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