Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
Screw the Hierarchy - After her boss put her life in danger with zero accountability, why has this Black female police officer been fighting for a decade? Part 1

After her boss put her life in danger with zero accountability, why has this Black female police officer been fighting for a decade? Part 1

08/02/20 • 48 min

Screw the Hierarchy
Boston police officer Brenda James began her career in the male-dominated, dangerous field in 1994. Her district was changing, becoming more inclusive and diverse. The police department adopted a different model of policing — “community policing” — developing partnerships and relationships with community members. Officer James was assigned to help carry out that mission. She was recognized for the work she did as a community service officer and then became a juvenile officer, a liaison between the police department and community – school officials, clergy, business-owners, social service agencies, and programs. She was involved in roundtable discussions, interventions, mediation, individual educational plans for students at risk, court advocacy for juvenile delinquents, and relationship-building with probation. She became certified to mediate and earned a masters degree in criminal justice from Boston University. But all that work went down the drain when a higher-up targeted Brenda in 2011 and escalated the abuse to a traumatic event on June 8, 2012. Learn more: https://www.dignitytogether.org/blog/police-officer-endured-series-of-abuses-for-eight-years-after-management-error If you've been abused at work related to your race, gender, disability, age, or other demographic and would like to share your story anonymously, email [email protected]. If you feel like you need more help, I have a free guide to recovery steps at dignitytogether.org/targets and a signup for daily boosts through your inbox at the same place. Facebook: @HierarchyPodcast Twitter: @ScrewHierarchy
plus icon
bookmark
Boston police officer Brenda James began her career in the male-dominated, dangerous field in 1994. Her district was changing, becoming more inclusive and diverse. The police department adopted a different model of policing — “community policing” — developing partnerships and relationships with community members. Officer James was assigned to help carry out that mission. She was recognized for the work she did as a community service officer and then became a juvenile officer, a liaison between the police department and community – school officials, clergy, business-owners, social service agencies, and programs. She was involved in roundtable discussions, interventions, mediation, individual educational plans for students at risk, court advocacy for juvenile delinquents, and relationship-building with probation. She became certified to mediate and earned a masters degree in criminal justice from Boston University. But all that work went down the drain when a higher-up targeted Brenda in 2011 and escalated the abuse to a traumatic event on June 8, 2012. Learn more: https://www.dignitytogether.org/blog/police-officer-endured-series-of-abuses-for-eight-years-after-management-error If you've been abused at work related to your race, gender, disability, age, or other demographic and would like to share your story anonymously, email [email protected]. If you feel like you need more help, I have a free guide to recovery steps at dignitytogether.org/targets and a signup for daily boosts through your inbox at the same place. Facebook: @HierarchyPodcast Twitter: @ScrewHierarchy

Previous Episode

undefined - The stereotypes that keep most of us out of power at work

The stereotypes that keep most of us out of power at work

There's one MAJOR factor that keeps mostly white men in power and the rest of us out of it: stereotypes. And they're not just reinforced at work. They're reinforced in the courts, rendering discrimination law not powerful enough to disrupt social hierarchies at work. That power results in a distinct hierarchy along demographics and income — aka how we as a culture value work as it relates to racial and gender stereotypes and how much comfort groups can experience with their incomes. Authors of the book Rights on Trial report this hierarchy of median incomes by demographic in 2014: Asian American men, $59,766 White men, $58,712 Asian American women, $48,419 White women, $44,236 African American men, $41,167 African American women, $35,212 Latino men, $35,114 Latina women, $30,329 (yes — that's about HALF the median income of Asian American men) If you've been abused at work related to your race, gender, disability, age, or other demographic and would like to share your story anonymously, email [email protected]. If you feel like you need more help, I have a free guide to recovery steps at dignitytogether.org/targets and a signup for daily boosts through your inbox at the same place. Facebook: @HierarchyPodcast Twitter: @ScrewHierarchy

Next Episode

undefined - After her boss put her life in danger with zero accountability, why has this Black female police officer been fighting for a decade? Part 2

After her boss put her life in danger with zero accountability, why has this Black female police officer been fighting for a decade? Part 2

Abuse of power didn't end for Boston police officer Brenda James on June 8, 2012 when her supervisor wrangled a loaded firearm from her retention holster, putting her life on the line according to Brenda. Members of the police department allegedly sabotaged Brenda through a series of errors and omissions over the course of eight years and counting. The worst part: not a single authority stepped in to hold those white officers accountable. Not one. Learn more: https://www.dignitytogether.org/blog/police-officer-endured-series-of-abuses-for-eight-years-after-management-error If you've been abused at work related to your race, gender, disability, age, or other demographic and would like to share your story anonymously, email [email protected]. If you feel like you need more help, I have a free guide to recovery steps at dignitytogether.org/targets and a signup for daily boosts through your inbox at the same place. Facebook: @HierarchyPodcast Twitter: @ScrewHierarchy

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/screw-the-hierarchy-431610/after-her-boss-put-her-life-in-danger-with-zero-accountability-why-has-59200755"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to after her boss put her life in danger with zero accountability, why has this black female police officer been fighting for a decade? part 1 on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy