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We continue our Best of 2023 episodes with an episode from the Future Hindsight podcast, hosted by Mila Atmos.
Jocelyn Simonson is Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School, a former public defender, and the author of Radical Acts of Justice: How Ordinary People Are Dismantling Mass Incarceration. We discuss how certain radical acts of justice challenge the legitimacy of the criminal system and form the underpinning of a new collective legal thought.
The four pillars of this work comprise of court watching, community bail funds, participatory defense, and people’s budgets. Bail funds are pulling the rug out from the system's justification for what it's doing. Defunding the system in this way shows that the combination of carceral and economic forces that we currently use to “do justice” is not inevitable. A big part of the power of these acts of justice is that they’re done collectively. Abolition has two sides: breaking down and building up. Jocelyn shared that “we need to simultaneously decarcerate, stop spending our resources, and start building it out.”
Follow Jocelyn on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/j_simonson
Follow Mila on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/milaatmos
Additional InformationThe Democracy Group listener survey
Future Hindsight Podcast
More shows from The Democracy Group
4.8
1111 ratings
We continue our Best of 2023 episodes with an episode from the Future Hindsight podcast, hosted by Mila Atmos.
Jocelyn Simonson is Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School, a former public defender, and the author of Radical Acts of Justice: How Ordinary People Are Dismantling Mass Incarceration. We discuss how certain radical acts of justice challenge the legitimacy of the criminal system and form the underpinning of a new collective legal thought.
The four pillars of this work comprise of court watching, community bail funds, participatory defense, and people’s budgets. Bail funds are pulling the rug out from the system's justification for what it's doing. Defunding the system in this way shows that the combination of carceral and economic forces that we currently use to “do justice” is not inevitable. A big part of the power of these acts of justice is that they’re done collectively. Abolition has two sides: breaking down and building up. Jocelyn shared that “we need to simultaneously decarcerate, stop spending our resources, and start building it out.”
Follow Jocelyn on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/j_simonson
Follow Mila on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/milaatmos
Additional InformationThe Democracy Group listener survey
Future Hindsight Podcast
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