Resources
Publications of Interest
- Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and a Road to Repair, Danielle Sered
- Promoting a New Direction for Youth Justice, Urban Institute
- Building on Ohio's Sentencing to Keep Prison Populations in Check, Alliance for Safety & Justice, Buckeye Institute, Americans for Prosperity
- Ohio's Statehouse to Prison Pipeline, ACLU of Ohio
- Enhancing Pretrial Justice in Cuyahoga County, ACLU of Ohio
- Budget Bite: Alternatives to Incarceration, Policy Matters Ohio
- Juvenile InJustice: Charging Youth as Adults is Ineffective, Biased, and Harmful, Human Impact Partners
- LGBT Criminalization and Criminal Justice Reform, Philanthropy OUTlook
- Two Lenses, One Goal: Understanding the Psychological and Structural Barriers People of Color Face in the Criminal Justice System, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity
- Defining Violence: Reducing Incarceration By Rethinking America's Approach to Violence, Justice Policy Institute
- Crime Survivors Speak: National Survey of Victims Views on Safety and Justice, Alliance for Safety and Justice
- Denied Existence: The Untold Stories of 90,000 Cases in Ohio’s Juvenile Courts, Ohio Juvenile Justice Coalition (related infographic)
- A shared sentence: The devastating toll of parental incarceration on kids, families and communities, Annie E. Casey Foundation
- SOS: Stress on the Streets: Race, Policing, Health, and Increasing Trust not Trauma, Human Impact Partners, OJPC, Ohio Organizing Collaborative
- Building the Road to Belonging: Three Ways Philanthropy Can Help End Mass Criminalization, Connie Cagampang Heller & Alexander Saingchin, NCRP
- In Jail & In Debt: Ohio's Pay to Stay Fees, ACLU of Ohio
- Bring Youth Home: Building on Ohio's Deincarceration Leadership, Ohio Juvenile Justice Coalition
- Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, Bryan Stevenson
- The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness , Michelle Alexander
- The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Mass contrition, not incarceration, Kirsten Levingston