Rebuilding the Criminal Justice System > Roosevelt Home > Roosevelt Challenges > Rebuilding the Criminal Justice System
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The Challenge: ensure that the criminal justice system strengthens our communities and delivers justice for all.
Crime is a destructive force in our communities. It undermines trust, steals children from schools, and all but precludes economic progress. In theory, a functioning Justice system will work to reverse these realities.
Unfortunately, our country has a broken system of justice, which so often makes crime worse. Our unprecedented prison population grows every year, while crime rates are unaffected. Very few of those who exit the prison system do so for good. Harsh incarceration policies do not treat addiction, but they do separate parents from children, suck up budget dollars that could be spent on education or crime prevention, and destroy career opportunities for incarcerated individuals.

At the same time, the justice system itself is filled with injustice. The death penalty, unequal access to legal aid, judicial elections financed by those with interests before the court, unequal sentencing laws, and racial profiling are just some of the unfairnesses within the system.
For many Americans, the dominant feature of their life is being caught between widespread crime and a cruel and destructive justice system. Fixing the system so it strengthens rather than hurting communities and delivers fair justice for all would make a huge difference in the lives of these individuals, and greatly expand safety, prosperity, and opportunity in America.
As prison spending spirals to the point of necessitating tax increases or squeezing out education entirely, and drugs become a rural as well as an urban issue, there is a potential new consensus about making the justice system work better for Americans. We will be a part of building and defining that consensus. Because so many of the decisions here are made at the community and state level -- prisons versus schools, treatment versus punishment, tougher sentencing versus fairer sentencing -- we are in an ideal position to make an impact.
The allies Roosevelt would make by picking a below-the-radar, politically unpopular issue rather than a limelight issue like healthcare or energy would appreciate our attention much more, and it would do good things for Roosevelt to work with these populations more.

Background briefing from the Summer Research College Potential avenues for further exploration from the original policy proposal
Check out the Student Peace Alliance Conference at Brandeis on October 19-21. They'll be discussing violence and its costs on society, and ways to improve the criminal justice system to ameliorate the current system.
Some Related Organizations:
Urban Institute, Justice Policy Center
National Center on Institutions and Alternatives
Vera Institute of Justice
The Jamestown Project
National Juvenile Defender Center

Group members: Tim H Krueger Jonathan S Alexandratos Adina B Appelbaum Adrian J Barry Adam Beck Nick R Bradley Takiyah A Butler Gracye Y Cheng Monica Chu Natalia Cianfaglione Bryce G Colquitt Robert J Coniglio Kirti Datla Ellen Y Davis Natalie C Doss James D Elias Lauren P Elliott Matthew D Fischler Amy K Frame Daniel F Gilles Anthony W Gomez Joseph H Grochowalski Stephanie A Gross Jake M Grumbach Adrian D Haimovich Amanda R Hillman Morgan H Hoban Joanna K Kyriazis Frank Lin Zach Marks Katie L Mesner-Hage Alyssa A Meyer Dalia M Mortada Elizabeth L Norris Fay O Pappas Brian C Pemberton Josh A Price David W Richardson John M Saylor Joseph A Sorgini Oliver Traldi William S Warden Jane Wilson Linda Zang
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