Just Reform

Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center

From the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center, this podcast is about the stats and stories that can help drive change in the criminal justice system.

Episodes

  1. 12/15/2021

    Prosecution Reform

    Professor Pam Metzger is joined by Professor Kay Levine, Miriam Krinsky and Liz Komar to discuss the progressive prosecutor movement, the various ways prosecutors can be involved in criminal legal reform, and the challenges that reform prosecutors face. This is the fourth episode in a five part series of criminal legal reform conversations that the Deason Center is holding in collaboration with the SMU Law Review. This podcast was edited and adapted from a live virtual event.   Panelists: Professor Kay Levine- Professor of Law, Emory University School of Law Miriam Krinsky - Executive Director, Fair and Just Prosecution Liz Komar - Director of Strategic Initiatives, Fair and Just Prosecution Professor Pamela Metzger- Director, Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center, SMU Dedman School of Law   Resources: 21 Principals for the 21st Century Prosecutor, Brennan Center and the Fair and Just Prosecution Project Report Reconciling Drug Courts, Decarceration, and Harm Reduction, A Fair and Just Prosecution Project Report The Problem of Problem-Solving Courts, Erin Collins, UC Davis Law Review, Vol. 54, No. 1573, 2021  The Rachel Rollins Policy Memo, March 2019   About the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center: The Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center is a nonpartisan center for research and advocacy that combines data-driven research and compelling stories to advocate for innovative criminal justice reform. Follow us on social media: TWITTER | INSTAGRAM | FACEBOOK | YOUTUBE   Music Credits: Slow Motion by Bensound

    46 min
  2. 11/22/2021

    Racial Injustice

    Professor Pam Metzger is joined by Professor Bennett Capers and Somil Trivedi  to discuss racial injustice through topics such as how history has shaped racism today, the relationship between communities and punishment, abolition, and a renewed optimism about change in new generations. This is the second episode in a five part series of criminal legal reform conversations that the Deason Center is holding in collaboration with the SMU Law Review. This podcast was edited and adapted from a live virtual event.   Panelists: Professor Bennett Capers- Professor of Law and Director of the Center on Race, Law, and Justice, Fordham University School of Law Somil Trivedi - Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU Criminal Law Reform Project Professor Pamela Metzger- Director, Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center, SMU Dedman School of Law   Resources: The Racial Architecture of Criminal Justice. Bennett Capers Afrofuturism, Critical Race Theory, and Policing in the Year 2044. Bennett Capers, 94 New York University Law Review 109 (2019). Why Prosecutors Keep Letting Police Get Away With Murder, Somil Trivedi, Slate  The System Is Working the Way It Is Supposed to: The Limits of Criminal Justice Reform. Paul Butler, 2019 Freedom Center Journal (2020),    About the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center: The Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center is a nonpartisan center for research and advocacy that combines data-driven research and compelling stories to advocate for innovative criminal justice reform. Follow us on social media: TWITTER | INSTAGRAM | FACEBOOK | YOUTUBE   Music Credits: The Lounge by Bensound

    48 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

From the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center, this podcast is about the stats and stories that can help drive change in the criminal justice system.