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Left to Right: Clinton Nichols, Binyamin Jones 鈥07 and Berto Aguayo 鈥16

Fall 2020 Dominican Magazine



Faculty and alumni are addressing social inequities in a time of crisis 海角社区 is one of only 26 higher education institutions across the country to be selected by the Association of American Colleges and Universities to participate in the Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation (TRHT) project, a comprehensive, community-based process committed to addressing historic and contemporary effects of systemic racism, and to advancing transformational and sustainable change.

Working to Level the Playing Field: Creating Peace in Chicago鈥檚 Neighborhoods

Clinton Nichols, assistant professor of criminology, has done research on racially biased policing and is a volunteer instructor for the Prison and Neighborhood Arts Project at Stateville Correctional Center. He was joined by Binyamin Jones 鈥07, a field training officer with the Chicago Police Department who has been involved in the Becoming a Man program, which brings together at-risk youth and police for basketball games and roundtable discussions. Berto Aguayo 鈥16 is the founder of Increase the Peace and a community organizer who has been recognized by the Obama Foundation. This summer, he was involved in voter registration and efforts to build solidarity between Chicago鈥檚 Black and Brown communities.



Jones spoke about the very difficult work of policing in 2020. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been difficult to deal with the pure anger against the few who have done something not morally or legally right,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he initial protests in July went somewhat as expected, but the mass looting in all areas was not anticipated. The looting and destruction of property was largely opportunistic, done by those seeking to get away with crimes. My weekends off were canceled for several weeks in a row.鈥



Aguayo reflected on the work of the community organization he founded in 2016. 鈥淥ur main mission at Increase the Peace is to prevent violence. Since March, we鈥檝e had to pivot to meet the community where it鈥檚 at: offering a food pantry, a street vendor relief program, and protecting small businesses in our community to prevent them from being looted,鈥 he said. Aguayo added that Dominican prepared him to be receptive to using non-violence. 鈥淣on-violence is courageous, not passive. During one downtown protest, I was beat up with batons and pepper sprayed by the police and it was really hard not to react to violence with violence. We鈥檙e fighting injustice, not those who are committing injustice. Dominican taught me to look at things holistically. It鈥檚 not that I don鈥檛 like police officers, I hate the system that creates tension between communities of color and police officers.鈥



Nichols offered insight on the current nature of policing. 鈥淧olice departments are bureaucracies. We can see that a bureaucracy allows police to engage in bad behavior. Do we see 鈥榖ad apples,鈥 or are aspects of the entire structure problematic? High levels of gun violence and opioid deaths speak to an issue of suffering that we are not willing to acknowledge in this country. How are we allocating resources? How can we reimagine policing? The community are the police and the police are the community. Hopefully we can find a way to bring that spirit back,鈥 he said.