The theme of this year's speaker series is Myths of Public Safety. Myths abound about what public safety is and how it is achieved. These myths have been the basis of efforts toward mass incarceration, aided in the destruction of lives and communities, and fed huge racial disparities—all the while, research shows, making the public less safe.

We were joined by guests who have helped to debunk these myths. Through discussions about both lived experience and innovative research, we hope to guide policymakers, practitioners, advocates, researchers, and community members in envisioning new practices, procedures, and policies that will bring about safe and thriving communities for all. In spring 2023 our focus was Parole.

The Myths of Public Safety recordings can be found on our YouTube channel.

 


 

Events in the Myths of Public Safety: Parole speaker series
 

Mass Supervision: Fix it, Shrink it, or Abolish it?

  • Vincent Schiraldi, Secretary of Juvenile Services, State of Maryland
     

What Process is Due? Community Organizing to Transform Parole

  • Michelle Lewin, Executive Director, Parole Preparation Project

  • Anthony Dixon, Director of Community Engagement, Parole Preparation Project

  • Lisa Berland, Volunteer with Parole Watch Massachusetts 
     

Presumptive Parole: New Jersey’s Experience and the Need for Continued Reform

  • Joseph J. Russo, First Assistant Public Defender, New Jersey Office of the Public Defender

  • Alicia Hubbard, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, New Jersey Office of the Public Defender
     

Parole and Reentry Start Inside: How Institutional Rules, Discipline, and Programs Drive Racial Disparities in Parole

  • LaToya Whiteside, Director of Racial Equity in Corrections Initiative at Prisoners’ Legal Services of Massachusetts

  • Jasmin Borges, Formerly Incarcerated Expert and Activist, Advocate, and Organizer, Massachusetts Bail Fund 
     

Does Perpetual Punishment Produce Safety? Executive Mercy and Access to Clemency 

  • Rachel Barkow, Charles Seligson Professor of Law; Faculty Director, Peter L. Zimroth Center on the Administration of Criminal Law, NYU School of Law
     

 


Organizers

Katy Naples-MitchellKaty Naples-Mitchell, Program Director of the Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management, is the moderator and co-organizer  of  the Myths of  Public Safety speaker series.

 

Sandra Susan Smith Sandra Susan Smith, is the co-organizer of the The Myths of  Public Safety speaker series. She is the Guggenheim Professor of Criminal Justice; Faculty Director of the Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management; Director of the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy; Professor of Sociology and Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute.