Law & Order Season 4 (1993-1994) features minor progressive elements primarily through casting adjustments driven by NBC executives responding to criticism over the show's limited diversity in earlier seasons. The replacement of white male Captain Cragen with Black female Lt. Anita Van Buren (S. Epatha Merkerson, introduced in Season 3) and Black male ADA Robinette with white female Claire Kincaid (Jill Hennessy) reflects early 1990s pressure for more female representation to avert cancellation, marking an incidental push for gender and racial diversity in leadership roles. This feels somewhat organic for a New York City police setting but was explicitly mandated rather than purely narrative-driven. Episodes occasionally tackle contemporary social issues like racism (e.g., 'Profile' on a racist serial killer), domestic abuse, and ripped-from-headlines cases, but these are balanced procedural explorations without overt lecturing, systemic critiques, or identity politics dominating the plot. The core storytelling remains traditional cop-and-court drama focused on law enforcement and prosecution, with no evidence of creator Dick Wolf emphasizing activism. No significant audience backlash labeling it 'woke,' no unjustified character swaps, and no modern social justice themes; reception was positive as part of the show's established success.