Justice and Prosperity
Reviving the Economic Potential of America’s Justice-Involved Communities and Individuals (and the Role of the Press)
More than 30 top practitioners, academics and private-sector leaders joined 20 journalists for two days of candid discussion on the lingering failures and inequities of the system and the economic impact those failures have had –not just on those who are released from prison, but on their families and neighborhoods— at the 9th annual John Jay/Harry Frank Guggenheim Symposium on Crime in America, at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City.
The Feb 10-11 symposium, sponsored by John Jay’s Center on Media, Crime and Justice (CMCJ), which also publishes The Crime Report, is entitled “Justice and Prosperity: Reviving the Economic Potential of America’s Justice-Involved Communities and Individuals (and the Role of the Press)”
This conference highlighted innovative programs private-public partnerships underway and the research data supporting them, as well as pointed towards some of the bipartisan approaches that are changing the nation’s approach to criminal justice.
William J. Bratton, the newly appointed Commissioner for the New York Police Department and one of the pioneers of community policing, delivered the opening remarks. Other speakers included: James Craig the chief of the Detroit Police Department and Dana Redd, the mayor of Camden, NJ.
Other panels focused on rebuilding communities with the help of the private sector, and on entrepreneurs who have created new economic opportunities for the formerly incarcerated. Speakers included Carol Naughton, of Purpose Built Communities, an Atlanta-based not-for profit; Navjeet Bal, of Nixon Peabody, a Boston law firm working on public-finance projects; and Frederick Hutson, founder of Pigeonly, a service for ex-inmates.
Three of the country’s most prominent corrections bosses addressed the role of corrections in preparing inmates for a return to workforce: Rick Raemisch of Colorado, Jeffrey Beard of California and Brad Livingston of Texas.
Rounding out the conference was panel on policing the Web and balancing economic and privacy rights. Speakers include: Tim Ryan, Managing Director of Kroll Advisory Solutions, former head of the FBI’s cybercrime squad; Carmen Ortiz, U.S. Attorney, District of Massachusetts; and Tyson Johnson, a leading cyberfraud investigator for Bright Planet.
For a full agenda click here.
Fellows Stories
Greg Barnes, Fayetteville Observer
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Sarah Mervosh, Dallas Morning News
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Christopher Moraff, The Philadelphia Tribune
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Glenn Smith, The Post and Courier
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Glenn Smith, The Post and Courier
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Glenn Smith, The Post and Courier
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Christopher Moraff, Philadelphia Tribune
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Alison Smith, Magic Valley (Idaho)
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Christopher Moraff, Al Jazeera
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Greg Barnes, The Fayetteville Observer
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Martin Kaste, NPR
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Christopher Moraff, The Daily Beast
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Andrea Dukakis, Colorado Public Radio
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Andrea Dukakis, Colorado Public Radio
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Andrea Dukakis, Colorado Public Radio
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Andrea Dukakis, Colorado Public Radio
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Resources from the Conference
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