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Questions of Justice features police officers of color, men and women, from across the country.

Undergrad-made film examines lives of Cops of Color
“I wish that all 18,000 police departments in this country were mandated to watch this film,” Campbell said. “It doesn’t paint the picture that this is the officer’s side or this is the community’s side or this is the black officer’s side. It paints a picture, really, of justice.”
– Britton O’Daly, Sammy Westfall, Yale Daily News
Anthony Campble was later voted in as Chief of the New Haven Police Department becoming one of very few black chiefs (and persons of color) to lead one of the oldest departments in the United States.

QUESTIONS OF JUSTICE

Documentary Film | 90 min | 2022
Questions of Justice is about black men and women performing a job that has historically been dominated by white men. What does it mean to embody difference in a job with such a complex relationship with black bodies?
Questions of justice continues to screen in sociology classrooms and on campuses such as at Yale University, Providence College, University of Montevallo as well as for over 800 high school students in Connecticut. It has screened for a social justice camp and multiple times at arts and film festivals sometimes with a director present and others with a follow up panel but always with an opportunity to discuss.

Back in production

Questions of Justice is back in production (2024) in an expansion of the original film with riveting new developments. To learn about scheduling a public screening contact Distance Media.
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For more information about a screening or to be in touch about a Distance Media project contact us below.
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