By Victoria Ravenel
The “whys” and “hows” of this crisis, its rise over the
past 40 years, and the weight it bears on the shoulders of our generation is
detailed statistically, anecdotally, and graphically in the Justice Policy
Institute’s new book, IncarcerationGeneration (ISBN 978-0-9892928-0-1), released
hot off the presses this week. The book of
essays is a collaboration between JPI and the leading thinkers and activists in
the criminal justice field, covering the people most affected by the criminal
justice system such as youth, women, and the mentally ill, and aspects of the
broken system including specialty courts, policing, and drug policy.
One of my favorite quotes from the book is found in the
foreword, written by New York Times
Bestseller Michelle Alexander, author of “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarcerationin the Age of Colorblindess.” She describes her visit to a school where
she could almost taste the rage and pain of so many kids, all of whom knew
someone who had been incarcerated. She
goes on to say, “In that silence and in those cries lies a truth that we, as a
nation, have been unwilling to face.”