The Redemption Project: Systems Explained

The Redemption Project

Student resources, civic explainers, criminal justice lessons and reverse Socratic content designed to help students think clearly about public systems. newsroom.theredemptionproject.news

الحلقات

  1. Criminal Justice Is Tested After Release

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    Criminal Justice Is Tested After Release

    by Brandon Burley and The Redemption Project Sentencing may dominate debate, but many of the most important public safety outcomes begin after someone returns to the community. We still measure criminal justice at the wrong moment. Most public debate focuses on sentencing, incarceration levels, and whether punishment sounds tough enough. But the most important question usually begins after someone leaves prison or jail. That is because most people who are incarcerated will eventually return to their communities, and the first year after release is often the most unstable part of the entire process. Housing problems, unemployment, untreated addiction, and weak supervision can all collide at once. When that happens, repeat offending often begins long before the next arrest ever appears in public statistics. That is why criminal justice is not really tested in the courtroom. It is tested after release, when structure becomes thinner and risk becomes real. Many policies are debated at sentencing. But outcomes are often decided later, when someone returns to unstable conditions and systems become less structured. That is where public safety either holds or begins to weaken again. I am a retired detective and criminal justice / government educator based in Tennessee. I am a commentary write for Tennessee Lookout and a weekly columnist with Knox TN Today. My work examines public policy, public safety systems and civic responsibility. My reporting and commentary have also appeared in Governing, The Arizona Capitol Times, South Florida Sun Sentinel, Police1, among other state and regional outlets. Get full access to The Redemption Project Newsroom at newsroom.theredemptionproject.news/subscribe

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  2. Redemption, Research, and What Actually Works in Prison Reform A Conversation with Dr. Robin LaBarbera

    ١٥ فبراير

    Redemption, Research, and What Actually Works in Prison Reform A Conversation with Dr. Robin LaBarbera

    What actually changes lives inside prison—and what only sounds good on paper? In this extended conversation, Brandon Burley sits down with Dr. Robin LaBarbera, a leading researcher on prison-based theological education, reentry, and well-being inside correctional systems. Drawing from years of firsthand research inside prisons and jails, Dr. LaBarbera explains why transformation cannot be measured by recidivism alone, how faith-based education reshapes prison culture, and why community, accountability, and purpose matter more than policy slogans. This episode explores: Why well-being is a stronger indicator of successful reentry than raw recidivism rates What prison-based theological education gets right—and why it changes entire housing units The gap between academic research and real-world practice How redemption stories inside prison challenge public assumptions about crime and punishment Why human dignity must come before policy outcomes This is not a debate episode. It’s a working conversation between research and lived reality—grounded in evidence, humility, and firsthand experience. Whether you’re a practitioner, educator, policymaker, or simply someone asking how people truly change, this conversation offers clarity few discussions ever reach. Get full access to The Redemption Project Newsroom at newsroom.theredemptionproject.news/subscribe

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حول

Student resources, civic explainers, criminal justice lessons and reverse Socratic content designed to help students think clearly about public systems. newsroom.theredemptionproject.news