Giving Compass' Take:
- The Aspen Institute interviews Amanda Alexander, a racial justice lawyer, historian, and founding Executive Director of the Detroit Justice Center, who is working to end mass incarceration and reimagine public safety.
- What can be done to make Detroit more just for its residents? How can you support shifting funding from policing to preventing interaction with the carceral system in your community?
- Learn about funding Black communities.
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What would it take to make Detroit a “just city” – an actual sanctuary of justice for its residents? Amanda Alexander, founder and Executive Director of the Detroit Justice Center is working on exactly that. Based on a wide range of experiences – from learning alongside ACT UP AIDS activists, to spending time in newly post-apartheid South Africa, to the Movement for Black Lives – Alexander combines her background as a historian and an attorney to reimagine safety and justice in Detroit.
In this episode of Shades of Freedom, Alexander weaves together her own experiences, and the long history of global civil rights movements, to discuss what’s going on right now in Detroit, including innovative supports for community members that prevent contact with the legal system in the first place, shifting funds from a focus on policing to prevention, and supporting communities to define and create their own safety.
Amanda Alexander, founding Executive Director of the Detroit Justice Center, is a racial justice lawyer and historian who works alongside community-based movements to end mass incarceration and build thriving and inclusive cities. Originally from Michigan, Amanda has worked at the intersection of racial justice and community development in Detroit, New York, and South Africa for more than 15 years.
Read the full article about Black liberation and justice in Detroit at The Aspen Institute.