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Judges

Fordham Law School

Faculty Scholarship

2015

Implicit Bias; Judicial Ethics; Rhetoric; Racial Justice; Stop-and-Frisk

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Legal Discourse And Racial Justice: The Urge To Cry ‘Bias!, Bruce A. Green Jan 2015

Legal Discourse And Racial Justice: The Urge To Cry ‘Bias!, Bruce A. Green

Faculty Scholarship

One who is convinced that a judge wrongly decided a case may sometimes be tempted to accuse the judge of bias, referring to unconscious social-group stereotypes and/or cognitive biases that fall under the rubric of “implicit biases.” The rhetoric is problematic, however, for various reasons. One is that the term “bias” in this context may be misunderstood to mean something different and unintended – either a disqualifying bias under judicial conduct rules or a conscious prejudice. Another is that, even if the intended meaning is clear, a judge’s implicit biases cannot fairly be inferred from a single wrong decision. To …