Systemic Inequities in Forensic Evaluations
In partnership with The Ohio Forensic Directors Association, Concept Professional Training, and Expert Evaluations, LLC we offer you the opportunity to reconsider how you perceive the individuals in front of you in a forensic evaluation. Our speakers will allow you to begin to consider the systemic inequities in the field of forensic psychiatry and psychology and how those inequities shape our ultimate opinions about everything from competency to sanity to transfer of cases.
As the nationwide awakening to racial and discriminatory injustices against minorities in this country continue to grow, laws have been changed and policies have been enacted to set a new standard for our society. Many established institutions have publicly stated a change in their approach to become more culturally aware and to train their staff to do the same. To be culturally competent is a requirement for most medical professionals and those who frequently interact with diverse groups of people. The American Psychology Association loosely defines cultural competency as, “the ability to understand, appreciate and interact with people from cultures or belief systems different from one’s own” (DeAngelis, 2015). In other words, gaining more resources to better evaluate or assist your patients by understanding their cultural background.
This conference was created to improve knowledge and skills for forensic evaluators, mental health providers, and related professions. Our committee aimed to provide professionals with a space to think introspectively about how they interact with those that are racially and culturally different. Different topics will be covered during this conference, such as trauma-informed care, intellectual disabilities/ASD in forensic cases, and the impact of racial discrimination on adolescent mental health. Our key speakers will be Dr. Brian Sims, Dr. Antoinette Kavanagh, and Dr. Joette James. Historically, racial, and ethnic minorities have not been treated properly in the medical field leading to significant hesitancy to receive medical aid that stretches across generations. With the implementation of this conference, our committee calls on forensic evaluators and mental health providers to take that extra step forward in recognizing the institutionalized boundaries patients face daily and applying this knowledge in the community.
Continuing Education credits are being applied for from the American Psychological Association and the Ohio Supreme Court (CLE). AMA credits are being sought as well. The cost of the conference is nominal to cover the costs. It is $25 per session or $65 for all three sessions. There is a discounted student rate ($10 per session).
To register: go to CONCEPT: https://concept.paloaltou.edu/systemic-inequities-conference/
Resources for Continued Learning
- Racism & Psychiatry, Springer Publishing and Contemporary Issues & Interventions, Medlock, 2018
- A Perilous Path: Talking Race, Inequality, and the Law, Sims, 2018
- Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, Sims, 2014
- Risks, Benefits, and Complexities: Reporting Race & Ethnicity in Forensic Mental Health Reports, Riggs-Romaine and Kavanaugh (2018)
- Justice for Teens: How research on brain development has dramatically changed the way courts view juveniles’ culpability, Kavanaugh 2017
- Engaging Communities to Address Latino Health Disparities (2017)
- Impact of Unresolved Trauma on American Indian Health Equity (2019)
- Racial Health Disparities: How COVID-19 Magnified a Public Health Emergency, Beyond the White Coat (podcast), Season 1 Episode 7
- Indian Boarding Schools’ Traumatic Legacy, And The Fight To Get Native Ancestors Back.
- Who You Calling ‘Hispanic’?
- Healing Need (Tonier Cain) production
- Behind Closed Doors (Tonier Cain) production
- National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors, Innovation in Behavioral Health Policy
- Olayiwola, J. (2020, October). Combating Racism and Place-ism in Medicine (TedTalk) Grey, H., & Hall-Clark, B. N. (2015).
- Cultural considerations in Asian and Pacific Islander American Mental Health. Oxford University Press.
- A Perilous Path: Talking Race, Inequality, and the Law, Sims, 2018
- Examining Systemic Racism https://news.stanford.edu/2021/02/16/examining-systemic-racism-advancing-racial-equity/
- Statistics re: age and gender disparities in incarceration/justice https://www.sentencingproject.org/publications/black-disparities-youth-incarceration/
- Race and Juvenile Justice, NACDL.org
- Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention https://ojjdp.ojp.gov/
- A Guide to the Forensic Assessment of Race-based Traumatic Stress Reactions 2009, Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
- The Importance of Racial Identity in Forensic Mental Health Assessments, 2021 Journal of American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
Resources identified by Dr. Kavanaugh during the presentation
- “The trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, the teen who shot and killed two protesters in Kenosha, Wis., begins next week. A judge ruled that prosecutors couldn’t call the people Rittenhouse shot “victims,” but the defense is able to call them “arsonists,” “looters,” or “rioters” — a move the prosecution is calling a double standard.”
- Unsplash is the repository of photos of people of color. We do not get any benefit from sharing this commercial link with you.
- James Baldwin on Dick Cavett Show (May, 1969)
- Baldwin – Buckley Debate (1965) The one-hour special program features a debate between Negro author James Baldwin and leading American conservative William F. Buckley, Jr., at the Cambridge Union, Cambridge University, England.
- Dr. Janet Helms, YouTube video from 2017.
- Dr. Janet Helms at Boston College Lynch School
- A Race Is a Nice Thing to Have: A Guide to Being a White Person or Understanding the White Persons in Your Life, Helms, 1992
- Inside the Whiteness Caucasian Box
- Peggy McIntosh (1989) Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack Peggy McIntosh, Ph.D. is an American feminist and anti-racism activist, the associate director of the Wellesley Centers for Women, and a speaker and the founder and co-director of the National S.E.E.D. Project on Inclusive Curriculum (Seeking Educational Equity and Diversity).
McIntosh is most famous for authoring the 1988 essay “White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through Work in Women’s Studies.” - White Like Me, SNL skit with Eddie Murray
- Francis Ansley (1988) Race Class and the Future of Civil Rights Scholarship