A Path Forward
After losing my son to gun violence, I started interviewing people who had taken a life in order to understand how we were trapped in the same cycles of suffering—and…
After losing my son to gun violence, I started interviewing people who had taken a life in order to understand how we were trapped in the same cycles of suffering—and…
A collaboration between the Institute for Nonviolence Chicago and Northwestern University is helping to save lives by honoring multiple forms of expertise.
People ask me now, three years since my release, what freedom feels like. It feels like the protests in Minneapolis.
Neither of us imagined that love and prison were compatible until we met. Now the state is weaponizing our marriage.
Facial recognition is just the tip of the iceberg. Today, AI is being used to monitor social media, track ICE targets, and classify swaths of the population as “future” criminals.
A series focused on how AI is worsening mass incarceration.
Temp agencies rely on a constant stream of formerly incarcerated workers to keep jobs unstable and wages low.
Professionalization will not make immigration policing less violent. It will only increase its capacity, authority, and scope.
As an incarcerated mother, I have fought to remain in my children’s lives. I’ve done everything I could—and it still wasn’t enough.
Trump’s allies incite moral panic about shrinking white families, even as the state dismantles families of color—a paradox rooted in slavery and eugenics.
The nation’s best-known prison journalist discusses his book ‘The Tragedy of True Crime’ and the challenges faced by those who write from inside.
More than half of states do not automatically restore voting rights upon release from prison. A short film contributes to the effort underway in Georgia to end this anti-democratic practice.
When I was falsely accused of abuse, North Carolina took away my sons. The charges were dropped but I still may never see them again.
Racial injustice was central to the establishment of the U.S. death penalty. Ending racial injustice must be central to its abolition.
A former editor-in-chief of a prison newspaper examines the responsibility of prison journalists, the constraints they work under, and why reporting from inside matters.
When my father was twenty-one—my age—he had already been in prison for two years.
Join Inquest’s staff in reading not-to-be-missed titles from 2025.
When reincarceration rates are treated as the sole measure of success, we undervalue the work formerly incarcerated people do to heal and confront their traumas.
I aged into adulthood under the violent custody of New York’s Downstate prison. My journey to manhood has required me to prove I’m neither a monster nor a statistic.
When Rikers furniture proves so unwieldy that her inside–outside book group can’t even form a circle, the author goes on a search to understand why U.S. prison furnishings are so…
How reality TV turns incarceration into entertainment—and helps strengthen the very systems of violence it claims to expose.
In Texas, when someone makes parole, they will only be released once they have an approved home. Many of us have nowhere to go, and no one to help us…
As shuttered jails and prisons become luxury venues, a growing movement is calling for community-led alternatives that honor the sites’ violent histories.
Making incarceration profitable—for both the state and corporations—generates untold hardship not only for incarcerated people but also for their families and communities.
A series in which incarcerated journalists across the nation, alongside experts and activists working to support them, share essential insights into the challenges at hand and the path forward.
States have restricted, surveilled, and punished prison journalism for decades, with dire consequences—for incarcerated people and for democracy.
For 150 years, Atlanta has endured racist policing that has served the interest of the city’s economic elite. The fight to resist this “Atlanta way” goes back just as far.
Inside Sing Sing, I turned my twenty-five-year sentence into music fit for one of the world’s greatest stages.
Over the course of the twentieth century, southern moderates claimed to pursue growth and modernization, even as they more permanently enshrined a racialized carceral state.
Under Biden, the FCC made unprecedented progress toward ending price gouging for prison phone calls. Now, Trump’s FCC has undone much of it.