Citing the case of autistic 14-year-old Avonte Oquendo of New York City, who disappeared two weeks ago, Stacia L. Brown, writing at Salon, explores how racial bias can hamper investigations of missing minorities. Bias, she says, could also prevent passersby from helping the disabled teen and keep the media from reporting the story.
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In the last 12 days, how many times have you asked yourself and others the following question: where is Avonte Oquendo? If youโre a New Yorker, youโve likely wondered more than once, as posters seeking help in locating the 14-year-old autistic boy โ missing since October 4 โ have been placed throughout the city. If youโre a black New Yorker, youโve probably inquired โ far more than once โ not only about Oquendoโs whereabouts but why more of the national public isnโt aware of who he is. But hereโs a query we may all be overlooking: if you saw a black teen boy wandering a city,ย how closely would you pay attention to him? And if you truly noticed him at all, would it onlyย be because he raised yourย suspicion?ย
Wandering is a common, high-risk occurrence for children with autism. According to Autism Speaks, which is currently offering aย $70,000 rewardย for Avonteโs safe return,ย nearly halfย of diagnosedย children over age 4 are prone to breaking away from family, school, or friends and disappearing. Fifty three percent of these wandering children were missing long enough to cause their loved ones to worry. What happens after that is often left up to the perceptions ofย passersby and announcements like the ones the NYPD and others have posted around the city to find Avonte Oquendo. Ifย a commuter were to encounter a wandering adolescent, would sheย pay enoughย attention to connect him toย the face plastered on lamppostsย and subwayย platforms? Wouldย she notice that the boy is disabled, worried or lost? Itโs difficult to know in any case, but when the wandering teen is black, racial bias makes these questions doubly fraught.ย
Read Stacia L. Brown's entire piece at Salon.
The Rootย aims to foster and advance conversations about issues relevant to the black Diaspora by presenting a variety of opinions from all perspectives, whether or not those opinions are shared by our editorial staff.
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