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Futures

The Fight Over Prison Flipping

As shuttered jails and prisons become luxury venues, a growing movement is calling for community-led alternatives that honor the sites’ violent histories.

Abigail Glasgow

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A closer look

Indentured Citizens

Making incarceration profitable—for both the state and corporations—generates untold hardship not only for incarcerated people but also for their families and communities.

Joshua Page & Joe Soss

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Defending Prison Journalism

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.

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Defending Prison Journalism

When Reporting Is a Crime

States have restricted, surveilled, and punished prison journalism for decades, with dire consequences—for incarcerated people and for democracy.

Corinne Shanahan & Andrew Crespo

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A closer look

Stop Cop City’s Deep Roots

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.

Jonathon Booth

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first person

I’m in Prison. My Opera Was Performed at Carnegie Hall.

Inside Sing Sing, I turned my twenty-five-year sentence into music fit for one of the world’s greatest stages.

Joseph Wilson

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racial capitalism

From Chain Gangs to the “Modern” Southern Prison

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.

Kirstine Taylor

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A closer look

Your Call Could Not Be Completed

Under Biden, the FCC made unprecedented progress toward ending price gouging for prison phone calls. Now, Trump’s FCC has undone much of it.

Bianca Tylek

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In Depth

The Myth of Forever Sleep

A new book examines why states continue to sell the American people on the utility of lethal injection—despite its well-documented, monstrous failings.

Corinna Barrett Lain & Carol Steiker

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first person

Hope You Get This

My earliest memories of life were being loved by my father. I couldn’t imagine then all the ways Black men’s lives are endangered.

Ariel Gilbert

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A closer look

Making an Example of Luigi Mangione

The criminal legal system aims to send a message by massively overcharging him: it will defend racial capitalism above all else.

Charlotte Boucher

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first person

I Walked Past Him

In prison, a cancer diagnosis might as well be a death sentence.

Tutankhamon Waterman

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Defending Prison Journalism

Prison Journalism Is a Disinfecting Light. That’s Why Prisons Suppress It.

A new initiative on prison journalism from the Institute to End Mass Incarceration aims to restore prison transparency and First Amendment rights for incarcerated journalists.

Andrew Crespo & Premal Dharia

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A closer look

Leaning In to State Violence

In ‘Enemy Feminisms,’ philosopher Sophie Lewis engages with the feminism of racists, colonizers, fascists, cops, and jailers to better understand what a truly liberatory politics needs to look like.

Sophie Lewis & Aya Gruber

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interventions

Patients Need Care, Not Policing

Providing hospital inpatients who use drugs with safe ways to do so is a critical part of what it means to “do no harm.”

Divya Manoharan

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Beyond Reform

Punishment in All but Name

Drug diversion programs are hyped by reformists as alternatives to prison—but they function just like punishment and people often end up incarcerated anyway.

Mary Ellen Stitt

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activism

Fighting for Relief

A new memoir details how Calvin Duncan became one of the nation’s foremost experts in post-conviction relief, helping hundreds incarcerated in Louisiana to fight for their rights, even as he…

Bidish Sarma

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A closer look

Tech Won’t Fix Eyewitness Identification

Eyewitness identification is a deeply flawed practice. Adding facial recognition technology, with its veneer of objectivity, only worsens the crisis of mass incarceration.

Will Collins

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democracy & power

The Canary in the Coal Mine

A number of factors—including a willingness of law enforcement to collude with federal authorities—make Los Angeles a distressing bellwether of a country succumbing to authoritarianism.

Leah Perez

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first person

Never Forget Attica Day

Decades of policy failures, including a culture of impunity for correctional officers, have eroded many of the gains that the Attica uprising’s incarcerated leaders fought and died to secure.

Joseph Wilson

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A closer look

Medical Debt Behind Bars

Incarcerated people accrue debt for nearly all of their medical care. This makes a mockery of their right to health care—and saddles them with devastating debt upon release.

Anna Anderson

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A closer look

The Work Continues

Revolutionary Black anarchist Martin Sostre spent much of his life as a political prisoner. A vivid new biography reintroduces him to a new generation of decarceral activists.

Garrett Felber & Orisanmi Burton

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collective action

Strike!

A collective, nationwide, complete refusal to work in prison would make the carceral status quo impossible to maintain.

J-Kid

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A closer look

The Dystopia of the World’s Tallest Jails

New York City’s plan to replace Rikers with skyscraper jails is a cautionary tale of how decarceral talking points can be misappropriated.

Jarrod Shanahan & Zhandarka Kurti

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abolition

Finding the Opportunity in Crisis

The public’s appetite for meaningful change ebbs and flows. When it peaks, how do organizers capture that energy and channel it into the fight to end mass incarceration?

Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, Judah Schept, Craig Gilmore & Ruth Wilson Gilmore

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abolition

Put Children First

Abolishing the child welfare system would create more avenues for protecting children, instead of devoting all of society’s energy to propping up a coercive system of surveillance and punishment.

Alan Dettlaff & Maya Pendleton

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abolition

Following the Money

Attempts by carceral authorities to shield their funding sources from public interference are proof that working to interrupt money flows is an effective way to oppose prisons.

Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, Judah Schept, Craig Gilmore & Ruth Wilson Gilmore

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Life Inside

Reclaiming Health Worthiness

Faced with often deadly medical neglect, incarcerated women form networks of care that provide the life-sustaining support the state fails to give.

Aminah Elster, Jennifer James, Giselle Pérez-Aguilar & Leslie Riddle

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abolition

Organizing the Already Mobilized

People involved with labor justice, grassroots community-building, and independent watchdogs make obvious allies for abolitionists—but how do we win them to our cause?

Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, Judah Schept, Craig Gilmore & Ruth Wilson Gilmore

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first person

108 Degrees

Eight Virginia prisons currently have no air-conditioning. We go to sleep in sweat and wake up in sweat, with no respite from dangerous heat.

Tutankhamon Waterman

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