“Hope Is a Discipline”
An ongoing abolitionist art installation at the Bedford branch of the Brooklyn Public Library helps patrons to visualize a future free of prisons.
An ongoing abolitionist art installation at the Bedford branch of the Brooklyn Public Library helps patrons to visualize a future free of prisons.
There’s a general disinterest within the prison system in the rehabilitation of incarcerated individuals. This is cruel, and it is shortsighted.
Periods of intense criminalization and conservative backlash often target sexual minorities—and then that fact gets dropped from popular recollection.
The law has constructed a regime in which incarcerated journalists like myself are silenced, punished, and disappeared for telling the truth about what happens behind these walls.
Every year, thousands of children are placed in solitary confinement by U.S. public schools as punishment for having a disability. This abuse and abandonment must stop.
Learning Buddhist meditation and yoga while incarcerated can help people cope with the stresses of prison, prepare them for reentry, and strengthen their abolitionist resolve.
ICE could never have created a large-scale deportation machine if it hadn’t enjoyed the voluntary assistance of local law enforcement.
Biometric technologies sold by companies like Clearview AI continue a racist legacy of marking bodies for the purpose of identification and capture.
Prison writing has often been the spark that lights the flame of political awareness among the incarcerated population and their outside allies.
A revival of War on Drugs–style punishment aims to score political points against liberal cities—but it won’t make us safer, and it won’t reduce opioid deaths.
Solitary confinement steals bites from the mind, heart, and soul every day, without you even realizing it. Eventually these stolen bites equal a whole piece of you gone.
For National Poetry Month 2026, new work from incarcerated authors Andrew Daniels, Steven Harrison, and Curtis Dickson.
“No longer will I travel A road that has no end . . .
I’m up all night looking out of the window. Staring at the moon.
“Unexplainable events of joy just blooms . . .”
Beauty Behind Bars exhibits artwork by incarcerated people from the Washington, D.C., area in community spaces. Here, the project’s leaders discuss the power of art in advocacy work.
With little transparency or oversight, technology is being used to flag youth as risks to public safety and deciding who is surveilled, arrested, and confined.
Laws governing who can legally own a gun take at face value the racist, incoherent category of “felon”—and thus worsen the crisis of mass incarceration.
A key author of the Community Justice Exchange toolkit for organizing against carceral infrastructure discusses the need, now more than ever, to center abolitionist goals.
Organizer Pedro Figueroa recounts working while being held in immigration detention, where he earned as little as $1 a day and helped to organize historic labor actions against for-profit prison…
In most of the country, police can catalog you as a gang member for virtually any reason—and you might never even know until you’re being punished for it.
Calling Jeffrey Epstein a child abuser comfortably demonizes him while overlooking how our culture normalizes straight men’s everyday coercion and abuse of women and girls.
Biometric technologies are increasingly using facial expressions, eye movements, voice patterns, and more to predict whether someone has or will commit a crime.
For National Poetry Month 2026, new work from incarcerated authors Trevor Reese, Lawson Strickland, and John Corley
“Five/Fourths” & “When Bars as These Won’t Read”
“Whisperings from Old Pompeii” & “God(s) Particle(s)”
“in the summer rain fences disappear . . .”
As long TSA lines have snarled airports, Democrats have touted their resistance to some aspects of immigration policing. But in reality our brutal immigration regime is a bipartisan creation.
This isn’t my first strip search during my incarceration. This, however, is the first time it’s being filmed.
Colorado’s ADX is designed to hold people under conditions of the most extreme deprivation. Despite this, the men imprisoned there continue to fight for their rights and freedom.