Safety from Surveillance
In their fight to get ShotSpotter out of Chicago, organizers have emphasized the ways that for-profit technology can never deliver on its promises to make communities safer.
In their fight to get ShotSpotter out of Chicago, organizers have emphasized the ways that for-profit technology can never deliver on its promises to make communities safer.
Most crime novels make detectives into heroes and offer resolution through punishment. Could a different kind of crime novel help us imagine a decarceral future?
The administrative remedy process is a roadblock to challenging inhumane prison conditions. With the help of advocates, people in prison are fighting back.
Most reentry programs assume a person who is able to work and live on their own. Those of us who are older don’t have that kind of freedom.
Prison transfers are routinely used to punish, disorient, and isolate incarcerated people, disconnecting them from family, friends, community, and all sense of place.
Defund gives us a platform and pathway to reimagine a society with less police, more care, and services that meet the needs of all.
Prosecutors alone won’t end mass incarceration. But their interventions can mean the world to people staring down the many harms of criminalization.
Electing progressive prosecutors is but one tool in a multifaceted, collaborative approach to ending mass incarceration.
Not all so-called progressive prosecutors are doing enough to dismantle mass incarceration. But they’re better than the alternative.
Progressive prosecutors have delivered tangible and rapid wins to a grassroots movement seeking to end mass incarceration.
Believing that prosecutors can play a role in ending mass incarceration requires imagining a prosecutor whose goal is non-reformist reforms.
Prosecution can be redefined to focus on effective problem-solving through policies and initiatives that make us a safer, healthier community.
Can a prosecutor, even a progressive or reform-minded one, really help dismantle mass incarceration?
Hardened, remote detention centers shape the experience of immigration imprisonment. Yet even there, a radically different future is possible.
Films that imagine decarceral futures are a cultural antidote for the carceral messages and aesthetics so prevalent in popular media.
Social work must be anti-carceral, against oppression, and committed to ending the systems, structures, and ideologies that cause people harm.
Even before the uprisings in Minneapolis, communities have been radically reimagining a world that doesn’t depend on policing.
Incarcerated people who work as firefighters have not escaped the prison; the prison has merely followed them outdoors.
A new book uses art to make the horrors of mass incarceration as visual, and visceral, as possible.
In seeking funding for non-carceral mental health crisis response, we're hoping to bring a small piece of our abolitionist horizon to our city.
Architects and designers must reckon with their role in the past and future of mass incarceration.
A new prison won’t fix the many problems that afflict our community. Only a vision for, and investment in, a different future will.
Mass incarceration rests on false narratives that carceral institutions themselves control. But some of us are fighting back.
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.
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.
“The Names They Call Us”
In New York and elsewhere, exploitative court-ordered fees shouldn't saddle a person who is already poor and criminalized.