This fall, the National Judicial College (NJC), located on the campus of the University of Nevada-Reno, will hold its second groundbreaking course to teach judges from across the nation how to develop and maintain anti-racist courtrooms.
This four-day course will be held in Montgomery, Alabama. Last years, inaugural course took place in Memphis, Tennessee.
“Participants will be challenged to examine their own beliefs, including unconscious beliefs, and consider anti-racist theory with practice as potential antidotes to bias,” says Judge Benes Aldana, president of the NJC.
The course is designed to identify sources of personal and systemic bias in courtrooms and to create or facilitate effective interventions.
Successful participants in the class are expected to lead “impactful initiatives to identify and mitigate sources of bias in the legal system, according to Judge Gayle Williams Byers, a Fellow at the NJC.
The course curriculum includes history, experiential learning, cognitive science, and psychological and sociological research.
Trump is Transparent Whether You like It or Not - Says Time Inc. Correspondent
Rural Women Have Started and Led Monumental Women’s Movements
India-Pakistan Conflicts Ratchet Up Tensions in an Already Volatile Region
Libel Laws Protecting Media Assailed by Trump and Justice Clarence Thomas
Iran’s Strength is the Primary Target of the Trump Team in the Middle East
Blackface and Other Racist Symbols Still Plague Our 21st Century Society
Religion & Science are Bound Together by Public Policy and Political Authority
Immigration Deadlock Strangles Congressional Initiatives & Real Reform
Wildlife Conservation in a Warzone: Perils and Triumphs in Afghanistan
Historical Documentary Building Blocks: People, Place, Stories and Events
Storytelling is Becoming More Experiential with New Available Technologies
Congressional Paralysis Caused by Must Win Mentality & Non-Stop Campaigning
Adult Literacy Efforts Make a Real Difference in Impoverished Areas of USA
Climate Change: USA Once a Leader in Solutions but Now an Outlier to China
NPR Editor Shares Insights into Trump’s Border Issues and Other Trump Policies
Innovation Disruption in the Beverage Business? You Bet, Says Coke VP
Health Deserts Plague Rural Areas but Specific Programs are Addressing Needs
Midterms Meaner and More Costly than Ever says TIME Correspondent Elliott
Hate Speech from the Top Can Heighten Chances for Violence
Medicine & Innovation Combine at the Cleveland Clinic through Dr. Frank Papay
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
Morning Wire