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Open Society-U.S.’s Soros Justice Fellowships fund outstanding individuals to undertake projects that advance reform, spur debate, and catalyze change on a range of issues facing the U.S. criminal legal system.
We are taking a moment to pause and analyze the future of our three U.S. based fellowship programs. This means we will not be issuing a call for proposals for 2025 fellows, as we would have done this fall.
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Year
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Maritza Perez
2015Maritza Perez will advocate for the provision of quality educational opportunities for Latinos who are currently or formerly incarcerated. -
Marlon Peterson
2015Marlon Peterson will advocate for bold measures to end gun violence and increase community safety in New York City through the creation of zones where no one will need to carry a gun—not even the police. -
Maya Foa
2015Maya Foa will identify and implement strategies designed to prevent the misuse of medicines in lethal injection executions in the United States. -
Noran Sanford
2015Noran Sanford will work to convert closed prisons in impoverished regions of rural North Carolina into sustainable farms and educational centers that serve youth, returning veterans, and others from the surrounding regions. -
nuri nusrat
2015Advocate nuri nusrat will develop the country’s first non-punitive, pre-charge restorative diversion model for children who sexually harm other children. -
Rachel Herzing
2015Rachel Herzing will launch a project to reduce the demand for police emergency responses in Oakland by increasing residents’ capacity to resolve conflict without having to call the police. -
Alisa Roth
2014Alisa Roth will develop a series of radio and print stories that explore how the criminal justice system has become the de facto mental healthcare system for so many people across the country. -
Andrea Ritchie
2014Andrea Ritchie will document and promote policy reforms and litigation strategies that address the specific ways in which discriminatory policing impacts women of color. -
Dolores Canales
2014Dolores Canales will expand the involvement of incarcerated peoples’ families in an effort to decrease mass incarceration and end the use of solitary confinement. -
Esi Mathis
2014Esi Mathis will train and mobilize a cadre of citizens directly impacted by the issue of young people serving long, adult sentences. -
Gina Clayton
2014Gina Clayton will establish an organization designed to help women with incarcerated loved ones become leaders in the struggle against mass incarceration. -
Kristen Bell
2014Kristen Bell will work to implement a groundbreaking new California law that allows for the early release of people serving long, adult sentences for crimes they committed as youth. -
Leslie Jill Patterson
2014Leslie Jill Patterson will promote the use of storytelling in capital murder plea negotiations, habeas proceedings, and clemency petitions to reduce executions in the state of Texas. -
Lois DeMott
2014Lois DeMott will launch a new project to provide critical information and support to families and friends of people incarcerated in Michigan. -
Mark Obbie
2014Mark Obbie will write a series of articles that explore sentencing policy from crime victims’ perspective and point out victim needs that are not met by the criminal justice system. -
Osagie Obasogie
2014Osagie Obasogie will expose the injustices associated with rarely scrutinized DNA databases. -
Rose Cahn
2014Rose Cahn will work with advocates across the country to stop the unjust deportation of immigrants with unconstitutional convictions. -
Seth Freed Wessler
2014Seth Wessler will report on the rapid growth of for-profit federal prisons used exclusively to hold noncitizens with criminal convictions. -
Shannah Kurland
2014Shannah Kurland will establish a project that documents police misconduct and provides legal support to people challenging abusive police practices in Providence, Rhode Island. -
Starcia Ague
2014Starcia Ague will launch a project to develop the leadership capacity of youth held in detention facilities in Washington State to prepare them for engaged and productive lives once released. -
Calvin Duncan
2013Calvin Duncan will seek to vindicate the post-conviction rights of people incarcerated in Louisiana prisons by increasing their access to court records and quality representation. -
Charity Tolliver
2013Charity Tolliver will form a grassroots campaign that challenges the policies and practices that push Illinois foster youth into the juvenile and criminal justice systems. -
Ian Mance
2013Ian Mance will use powerful and newly-available statistical evidence to expose and directly challenge the systemic practice of racial profiling in several North Carolina counties. -
Jackie Sumell
2013Jackie Sumell will launch a new media campaign that exposes the widespread use and abuse of solitary confinement and supports existing advocacy campaigns. -
Joshua Gravens
2013Joshua Gravens will educate Texas policymakers, law enforcement, the legal profession, and the general public about the harms associated with placing children on sex offense registries.
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