In Furor Over Poet With Child Porn Conviction, Prison Abolitionists Debate the Limits of Mercy

[Note: Friends of Justice is a personal blog. I speak only for myself.]

Photo: Zbigniew Bzdak/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

“A bedrock principle of the prison abolitionist movement is that you don’t ask an incarcerated person what they’re in for. It’s more than etiquette. To eschew the identity that the punitive state assigns — which could be false — is to see someone whole. “Each of us is more than the worst thing we’ve ever done,” says Equal Justice Initiative founder Bryan Stevenson. Even a murderer is somebody’s baby.

“That’s the way guest editors Tara Betts, Joshua Bennett, and Sarah Ross — poets, abolitionists, and educators behind bars and in the free world — approached the submissions to “The Practice of Freedom,” the February 2021 issue of Poetry magazine. The issue features the work of people who are or were incarcerated, their families, and those who work in “carceral spaces.” The contributors had already been judged and punished; the editors would judge the work, no rap sheet attached, not its makers. ”

NCRJ Director Judith Levine offers compassion and common sense in response to sex hysteria.

Read her article in The Intercept.

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