Racial profiling

The Commission can help with racial profiling that occurs in a protected area and based on one or more protected grounds covered under the Alberta Human Rights Act.

What is racial profiling?

Racial profiling happens when someone treats an individual differently because of negative stereotypes or beliefs related to their race, ancestry, colour, place of origin, or religious beliefs. The Alberta Human Rights Act protects against racial profiling that leads to discrimination if it occurs in a protected area and is based on one or more protected grounds.

Examples of racial profiling issues protected under the Act include:

  • A city police officer stops and searches vehicles driven by young Black males more often than vehicles driven by others because of an assumption that young Black males are more likely to commit crimes. This is discrimination in the protected area of services and based on the protected grounds of age, race, colour, and gender.

  • Bar security personnel refuse entry to a young adult of Southeast Asian ancestry based on the belief that young adults of Southeast Asian ancestry are involved in gangs. This is discrimination in the protected area of goods and services and based on the protected ground of ancestry or place of origin.

  • An employer wants a stricter security clearance for an employee who practices the Islamic faith based on a racist belief that Muslims engage in terrorist activity. This is discrimination in the protected area of employment and based on the protected ground of religious beliefs.

  • A landlord refuses to rent an apartment to an Indigenous person based on stereotypes that Indigenous people abuse drugs and smoke tobacco. This is discrimination in the protected area of tenancy and based on the protected grounds of race, ancestry, colour, or religious beliefs.

  • A manager prefers to hire employees who are similar to their own race. This may be an unconscious bias towards certain races while excluding other races. This is discrimination in the protected area of employment and based on the protected ground of race.

Usually, but not always, the reasons people give for carrying out racial profiling are safety, security, and public protection. This does not mean racial profiling is acceptable.

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Impact of racial profiling

Being racially profiled is a degrading and humiliating experience. It can affect a person and a community emotionally, financially, and socially. Racial profiling may:

  • lead to an individual’s loss of dignity and confidence
  • erode people’s confidence that businesses, organizations, and institutions will treat them fairly
  • disempower individuals and cause them to believe others see them as undesirable or worthless
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Preventing racial profiling

Public and private businesses, as well as organizations and institutions, have a responsibility to make sure they operate without discrimination. Organizations can create and enforce policies preventing racial profiling. They can also train their staff to treat all patrons with respect. The Commission supports communities and municipalities to develop strategies that counter hate, racism, and discrimination.

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Responding to racial profiling

If you believe you have experienced racial profiling, your response may depend on the situation. Customers, clients, guests, and employees can look for constructive ways to deal with racial profiling that has led to unfair treatment. Some options include:

  • Take immediate action by talking to a manager and expressing your concerns.
  • If taking immediate action is not appropriate, possible, or safe, write a detailed description of what occurred. Include the time and date the incident occurred, who was involved, and if there were any witnesses. You can make an appointment to speak to the manager afterwards or deliver the letter addressed to the manager.
  • Contact the Commission to talk about your concerns. Talking to the Commission is free and confidential.
  • Make a human rights complaint to the Commission.

Public and private businesses, as well as organizations and institutions, should respond respectfully to human rights concerns raised by employees, customers, clients, guests, and members of the public.

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