At a breakout panel called 鈥淪ocial Justice in Practice,鈥 Mariame Kaba, a community organizer, educator, curator, prison abolitionist and founder and director of , received the (IMD-ICCR) Award, established in 2005 in the name of ICCCR鈥檚 founder, the late Professor Emeritus Morton Deutsch, an eminent social psychologist peace leader who worked to promote constructive conflict resolution. Kaba received the Outstanding Scholar-Practitioner Award for her ongoing work in prison justice.

Ahram Park (M.Ed. 鈥19, International Education Development), a doctoral candidate in TC鈥檚 Communication, Media and Learning Technologies Design Program, received the 2019 Morton Deutsch Award for Outstanding Graduate Student Paper for her dissertation, a 鈥減articipatory ethnographic study鈥 of an alternative-to-detention after-school program in Brooklyn..

ADVOCATING FOR SAFE HAVENS Ahram Park said that "the care framework" at Voices, the after-school program she studied, "could help us to reimagine and restructure" safer schools. 

Kaba was interviewed by Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Associate Professor of Africana Studies and Director of Peace & Justice Studies at Gettysburg College. Earlier in the day, Williams had received TC鈥檚 Early Career Award for his work as a peace educator and supporter of educational equity.

Kaba described her career spanning three decades, during which she taught high school and founded NIA, a grassroots organization working to end youth incarceration, and several organizations to combat violence against girls and women.

Kaba, an 鈥淎ctivist-in-Residence鈥 at the Center for Research on Women at Barnard College, read from an essay she wrote about a conversation over lunch she had with Monica, an 18-year-old mother who had just been released from prison. Monica is not interested in following the long list of rules that are supposed to govern her life on parole, Kaba said, and even if she were, the cards were stacked against her from the minute she became free. For example, she is supposed to go back to high school, but many schools will not readmit a student who has been involved in the prison system. She has no money, and she will have difficulty getting a job. She makes clear to Kaba that she will continue her pre-prison life of 鈥渟truggling, hustling and surviving鈥 to feed herself and her family.

Every parole story is unique, but, Kaba said, Monica鈥檚 story exemplifies the systemic problems with the prison industrial complex in the United States that threaten incarcerated youth and adults with 鈥減remature death.鈥 These problems start at school, where some students are marginalized by 鈥渋rrelevant curriculum鈥 and 鈥渃omplete and utter racism of some of the educators.鈥 Many students become disengaged in school and fall victim to 鈥渆xcessive expulsions, detentions and arrests on school campuses.鈥 Many young people who serve time in prison never get back to school, given the hurdles put before them by the parole system. Kaba believes the school-to-prison pipeline and the prison and parole systems simply revisit violence on young people who have already experienced it in one form or another.

The solution also lies not just in abolishing the prison system, she said, but in building in its place community-based organizations that provide support and accountability for all parties involved in violence. NIA engages young people in 鈥渓ife affirming,鈥 creative activities such as hip-hop cyphers, designed to build support for young people and families in their communities and encourage them to see themselves as 鈥減eople with agency.鈥

The most important feature of what Kaba calls 鈥渢ransformative justice鈥 organizations for young people is leadership by young people themselves and a base in the community rather than in a profession or a bureaucracy.

Academic Festival 2019

The day included an extensive lineup of presentations, panels and other events featuring TC faculty, students, alumni and staff.

 

鈥淪tart where you are, start with your people,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hink about what鈥檚 in your community and how you can contribute to it.鈥

Park summarized her study at Voices, an after-school program for ages 7 through 16 in several locations in New York City. Voices is a court-mandated alternative to detention where children can develop tools for self-care and to care for one another, by participating in extracurricular activities that might be found in any well-resourced school, such as art, theater, sports, photography and video instruction, and in town-style meetings at which participants can plan activities and projects and suggest new ones.

Park found that Voices helps participants develop their own voices and sense of agency. More important, she suggested, the 鈥渃are framework鈥 at Voices 鈥渃ould help us to reimagine and restructure鈥 schools themselves, to become safe havens in the 鈥減hysical, mental and emotional sense鈥 and beyond.