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What We Know

Solutions from Our Experiences in the Justice System

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"This is what we know, and we know it better than anyone else." —from the introduction by Vivian Nixon and Daryl V. Atkinson

A thoughtful and surprising cornucopia of ideas for improving America's criminal justice system, from those most impacted by it

When The New Press, the Center for American Progress, and the Formerly Incarcerated and Convicted Peoples and Family Movement issued a call for innovative reform ideas, over three hundred currently and formerly incarcerated individuals responded. What We Know collects two dozen of their best suggestions, each of which proposes a policy solution derived from their own lived experience.

Ideas run the gamut: A man serving time in Indiana argues for a Prison Labor Standards Act, calling for us to reject prison slavery. A Nebraska man who served a federal prison term for white-collar crimes suggests offering courses in entrepreneurship as a way to break down barriers to employment for people returning from incarceration. A woman serving a life sentence in Georgia spells out a system of earned privileges that could increase safety and decrease stress inside prison. And a man serving a twenty-five-year term for a crime he committed at age fifteen advocates powerfully for eliminating existing financial incentives to charge youths as adults.

With contributors including nationally known formerly incarcerated leaders in justice reform, twenty-three justice-involved individuals add a perspective that is too often left out of national reform conversations.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 6, 2020
      Criminal justice reform advocates Nixon and Atkinson, both of whom have served time in prison, present a unique and valuable collection of essays by currently and formerly incarcerated people offering “concrete solutions to some of the hardest and ugliest problems in the criminal legal system.” The authors’ stark descriptions of racial violence and “dehumanizing” conditions paint a grim picture of prison life and provide an insider’s perspective not found in the works of social scientists and criminologists. Their reform ideas include a quixotic but well-informed argument to abolish the punishment clause of the 13th Amendment (which allows for the exploitation of prison labor), and programs to reduce recidivism through literacy training (70% of incarcerated prisoners can only read at a fourth-grade level or below), increasing access to digital technologies during and after incarceration, and the earmarking of certain state jobs for ex-offenders. Other contributions tackle prisoner voting rights and the rehabilitation of juvenile offenders (“the backbone of our adult mass incarceration problem”). Uniformly well-written and cogently argued, these essays cast a harsh light on the prison system and the obstacles millions of Americans face in getting their lives back on track. Policy makers, lawyers, and activists should take note.

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  • English

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