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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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Abubakr Muhammed Karim
2005Karim will undertake an effort to replicate a model re-entry program run for and by men and women who were previously incarcerated, former substance abusers, or diversion sanctioned probationers. -
Alexander Ndaula
2005Ndaula will work with nonprofit organizations, universities, and other groups to provide support to immigrants who are detained in the rural South. -
Annie Sundberg and Rickie Stern
2005Sundberg and Stern will complete and distribute the wrongful-conviction documentary The Trials of Darryl Hunt. -
Dan Hunt and Janet Baus
2005Hunt and Baus will complete and distribute the documentary film Cruel and Unusual, which tells the stories of transgender women–biological males who have lived as women on the outside–incarcerated in state and federal prisons for men. -
Dana Kaplan
2005Kaplan, an organizer and activist, will launch a project that addresses the expansion of local jails, which has accelerated considerably even as prison growth has slowed. -
Emmett Solomon
2005Solomon will develop a coordinated network of mainstream and conservative religious leaders to advocate for and educate the public about the need for alternatives to incarceration. -
Fredric Dannen
2005Dannen is completing a nonfiction book on David Wayne Spence, an innocent man executed by the state of Texas. -
Gregory Hooks
2005Hooks, chair of the Sociology Department at Washington State University, will build on prior research to challenge the widely held assumption that prisons can contribute to economic growth, especially in hard-pressed local areas. -
Harmon Wray
2005Wray, a lay minister and advocate rooted in the South and its religious culture as well as in the national network of organizations seeking deep changes in our society s response to crime and violence, will begin a Program in Faith and Criminal... -
Jeffrey Fagan
2005Fagan, a Columbia Law and Public Health professor, will critically examine new research evidence on the deterrent effects of capital punishment. -
Joe Loya
2005Loya will write The Parole of Buddha Lobo, a memoir of his first five years out of prison. -
Kenavon Carter
2005Carter will launch a project to reduce racial profiling by law enforcement agencies in Texas. -
Kristi Couvillon
2005Couvillon, a lawyer and social worker, will conduct a multi-faceted effort to implement the American Bar Association Guidelines regarding defense representation in death penalty cases in Texas and the surrounding states. -
Michele Deitch
2005Deitch will examine several international prison oversight models, as well as the few examples of nonjudicial oversight that already exist in the U.S., with a view towards broader application (and adaptation) of these models in the U.S. -
Michelle Alexander
2005Alexander will write a book for a mainstream audience that argues that the war on drugs and mass incarceration is "The New Jim Crow." -
Norris Henderson
2005Henderson, an organizer and advocate, will launch a project to remove barriers preventing formerly incarcerated people from participating fully in the economic, social, and political life of the community. -
Shaena Fazal
2005Fazal will conduct research, litigation, and coalition building that will result in increased opportunities for long-term prisoners without compromising public safety, and reduce recidivism as well as corrections spending. -
Vivian Nixon
2005Nixon, an advocate and ordained minister, will launch a project to educate ministers and lay leaders of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in five northeastern states about the disproportionate number of people of color in prison and the need... -
Adrian LeBlanc
2000Adrian LeBlanc will write a series of articles on the intergenerational impact of prison, characterizing the troubling ways in which the children of incarcerated parents absorb the culture of prison. -
Alden Loury
2000Alden Loury will write a series of stories exploring how and why African Americans have suffered the greatest casualties in Chicago's "war on drugs" at every stage of the criminal justice system. -
Betsy Ginsberg
2000Betsy Ginsberg will challenge discrimination against mentally and physically disabled prisoners in New York, focusing on the biases which disabled prisoners face. -
Heba Nimr
2000Heba Nimr will assist INS-detained immigrants, their families, and communities in their efforts to change public opinion and the local law enforcement policies which have led to skyrocketing detention rates for non-citizens. -
John Biewen
2000John Biewen will produce "Beyond the Lock Up Society," a series of public radio documentaries exploring the stories of political and law enforcement leaders in the US (and Canada) who are rejecting America's unprecedented resort to incarceration... -
Lenore Anderson
2000Lenore Anderson will provide legal education and advocacy training to parents whose sons and daughters face incarceration, and to support them in their efforts to reform harsh incarceration policies. The project is expected to reduce the... -
Robin Busch
2000Robin Busch will expand a new college program at Sing Sing Correctional Facility and raise public awareness of the importance of higher education for prisoners. The project will help prepare inmates for life outside of prison and will highlight...
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Brandon Brown
2024Brandon Brown and Catherine Besteman will educate, coordinate, and interrupt the flow of people into prisons through building a robust, reparative, healing alternative to incarceration in the wake of harm. -
Catherine Besteman
2024Catherine Besteman and Brandon Brown will educate, coordinate, and interrupt the flow of people into prisons through building a robust, reparative, healing alternative to incarceration in the wake of harm. -
Claudia Muñoz-Castellano
2024Claudia Muñoz-Castellano will educate and create a Texas statewide legal empowerment program to combat the alarming rise in criminalizing policies and practices that target immigrants. -
Deborah Small
2024Deborah Small will study the impact of local efforts to “reimagine public safety,” focusing on the effectiveness of the initiatives, enhancing trust between law enforcement and the community, and addressing systemic issues. -
Elizabeth Kennedy
2024Elizabeth Kennedy will research deportees to El Salvador and Honduras, focusing on youth, Indigenous and Garifuna communities, the LGBTQI+ population, and survivors of sexual and gender-based violence. -
George Morton
2024George Morton will establish an initiative that elevates the vast expanse of Black narratives and fosters the transformation of Black people as artists and art subjects. -
Gina Jackson
2024Gina Jackson and Lea Wetzel will build a national model of peer support and best practices for missing and murdered Indigenous Womxn (MMIW/G). -
Kelly Davis
2024Kelly Davis will research the needs and experiences of pregnant people who have been incarcerated, to inform and advance a broader policy agenda based on gender-based violence, reproductive justice, and criminal justice reform. -
Lauren Faraino
2024Lauren Faraino will engage in legal and storytelling advocacy to investigate, and expose, and halt the unlawful practice of harvesting organs of people who die while incarcerated without family permission. -
Laverne Thompson
2024Laverne Thompson will craft a dynamic community archive of the groundbreaking efforts of Louisiana’s advocates and visionaries who paved the way for criminal justice reform in Louisiana. -
Lea Wetzel
2024Lea Wetzel and Gina Jacksin will build a national model of peer support and best practices for missing and murdered Indigenous Womxn (MMIW/G). -
Nia Lee
2024Lee will spearhead a national series for justice-impacted Black and Brown queer women, femmes, trans, and gender-expansive individuals to create a platform for dialogue, community building, and transformative justice spaces. -
Temi Mwale
2024Temi Mwale will examine how technology produces state violence and harm through the criminalization of Black communities, with a unique focus on the parallels between the United States, the United Kingdom, and Brazil. -
Tijanna Eaton
2024Tijanna Eaton will support authors who have served time in United States prisons, jails, and immigration detention centers, with wraparound coaching and services to develop books sharing their vital stories.
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