For the Public Good
While on parole in Oregon, homelessness, unemployment, and lack of services kept me in survival mode. This is not public safety.
While on parole in Oregon, homelessness, unemployment, and lack of services kept me in survival mode. This is not public safety.
Education is integral to centering the holistic well-being of incarcerated people.
Some of the greatest violence of prisons is hidden, in plain view, within their banality.
Every Saturday, we’ll send you a digest with the latest essays from people thinking through and working for a world without mass incarceration.
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From ‘Abolition in Action’:
From our series exploring how people are practicing abolition in their communities, a look at how public health is now central to decarceral efforts.
Decarceral Pathways
by Katie Myers
When people need care, then the solution should be to get them care, not increase the risk of police violence.
We embrace nonconformity in principle—but not for Black men, whose quirks can provoke fear, policing, and punishment.
In New York and elsewhere, exploitative court-ordered fees shouldn’t saddle a person who is already poor and criminalized.
New series
Throughout April, incarcerated poets will offer their art and their hopes for a different future.
In the introduction to our National Poetry Month series, an incarcerated poet reflects on how writing is helping him reclaim the story of his life.
From sex work to sex offender registries, a queer politics requires that we end state practices of sex exceptionalism.
There’s no aging with dignity for people serving extreme sentences. Freeing them is only a start to a deeper paradigm shift.
There can be justice beyond punishment. To realize it, we must challenge the narrative that carceral violence is the only response to other forms of violence.
Police academies socialize officers into an us-versus-them mentality—particularly when it comes to activists—and harden them to any attempts at reform.
Public skepticism about scientific research, coupled with echoes of the war on drugs, have hindered our city’s ability to respond to our overdose crisis.
Reacquainting ourselves with practices that made prisons more permeable can be a step toward ending mass incarceration.
Recovering a vision of queer solidarity with incarcerated people may just be what people disaffected by the gay rights movement need today.
Connecting it to the fight for disability rights has helped activists in California to make exciting progress in their effort to end solitary confinement.
Activism must involve incarcerated people—but few outside advocates really understand the dangers and limitations that imprisoned organizers face.
Anti-jail organizers scored important wins in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. But their fight isn’t over.
The D.A.R.E. program turned students into snitches, leading to the arrest and incarceration of friends and loved ones who used drugs.
The oral histories of political prisoners shed light on their true character—and expose the darkness of the state.
Since our launch, we have published a number of essay series and collections examining drivers of and solutions to our crisis of mass incarceration. Find them all here.
Reparations for historic wrongs require concrete action, and that’s no different for the untold harm caused by cannabis criminalization.
In Illinois, ending money bond was our target. Pretrial freedom is our goal.
The crisis of youth incarceration won’t be solved by cynical attempts to co-opt the language of grassroots organizing.
What we are reading
A selection of recent books that invite us to imagine a world without mass incarceration.
by Angela Y. Davis
by Laura McTighe & Women With a Vision
by Jack Norton, Lydia Pelot-Hobbs & Judah Schept
by César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández
Taking criminal law out of immigration enforcement is a step toward safer, healthier communities. But is it enough?
So-called “smart” borders are just more sophisticated sites of racialized surveillance and violence. We need abolitionist tools to counter them.
The lives of undocumented immigrants are very much documented—subject to the surveillance that’s endemic to contemporary life in the United States.
Policing on college campuses falls hardest on formerly incarcerated students, leaving them and the broader community unprotected.
The fight against police and prisons cannot be separated from the struggle to extend care beyond the limits of the family form.
Attica represents far more than a historic rebellion about prison reform. Its revolutionary abolitionist vision endures today.
Series
A collection of essays at the intersection of labor and the carceral state, in partnership with LPE Blog.
A new book centers prisons in the history of U.S. empire, reminding us of the need for international solidarity in the fight for freedom.
For incarcerated people, prison education programs can offer not only knowledge but also hope that a different future is possible.
Life-without-parole sentences hit families especially hard. Yet they fight on, committed to their loved ones’ freedom.
Reentry is an extension of the carceral continuum, a limbo between confinement and freedom.
Black, Brown, Indigenous, disabled, and poor children and their families bear the brunt of a system that many now agree should be dismantled.
Sentences
—Adamu Chan, an abolitionist filmmaker, in “Beauty on the Inside”
Inquest publishes new, thought-provoking ideas and essays weekly.
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