At princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. Isple were saying big data transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing daily operations . I quickly realized there was not actually ironically very good data,n police use of big and thats when i decided to pursue an ethnographic study on that question. Susan we will have lots of time to explore the details, but what is the conclusion you came to after you spent this amount of time investigating the topic . Sarah the conclusion is basically that instead of thinking about data as some sort of objective or fundamentally unbiased tool,
Cspan. Org, or listen on the free cspan radio app. Susan sarah brayne, your new book seems like it is welltimed for a National Debate on policing, but you tell readers youve been working on the project about a decade. How did you get started in this interest in big data and the police . Sarah when i was a phd student at princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. People were saying big data is transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing daily operations . I quickly realized there was not actually ironically very good data on police use of big data, and thats when i decided to p
[captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2020] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] susan sarah brayne, your new book seems like it is welltimed for a National Debate on policing, but you tell readers youve been working on the project about a decade. How did you get started in this interest in big data and the police . Sarah when i was a phd student at princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. People were saying big data is transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing
The. Business. Get at the. Masters and flying competition winners they spend every weekend it is built a new line has appeared in their Family Budget to purchase and maintenance almost every plane at the airfield is privately owned. At the bullocks but nobody. So similar to most that you. Have published but its a. Little more than. The competition theyre preparing for is being run for the 3rd time and its a serious challenge even for experienced arithmetic pundits. Are going to pick up from where i would very much the show yeah. Yeah but i mean. Theres only one training day to go before the competition the track is a simple series of pans of pilings for the planes to cars through and it must be really. Not only a little while the us was dealing with it but i knew the show it is and the goody goody. Just really goes for the human being but did the good no rhythm this post was just. Pushed loose too much. But it is at this its. The pilot has been set on a platform. And the 1st pilot has
John lewis who marched alongside Martin Luther king and went on to serve his 17 terms in congress as died at the age of 80. Im Rebecca Ritters welcome to the program a year later is trying to Reach Agreement on a 750000000000 euro coronavirus Recovery Plan have extended their summit into a 3rd day despite meeting until late on saturday night in brussels they did failed to finalize a deal member countries are divided on how much of the money should be distributed as grants and how much as loans hard hit Southern States including italy and spain a seeking substantial aid payments bought a group of fiscally frugal northern country. Favor loans and more control over how the money is spent. Bridging the gap between the 2 opposite camps is a proving to be a major challenge but there is hope that a compromise will eventually be reached to summon you 1st in summary one can say it is going quite well things are going in the right direction of course as youd expect its a tough struggle a tough n