Making an Impact – Interview with Osamagbe Osagie
Interview with CPO board member, Osamagbe Osagie On July 27,
Interview with CPO board member, Osamagbe Osagie On July 27,
Shaka Senghor offers a deeply inspiring memoir that illuminates the connection between poverty, neglect, trauma, race, and the prison industrial index. He bounces back and forth through time, from his life on the streets as a 14-year-old drug dealer to the nineteen years he experienced on the inside of an American prison.
Police brutality has become a front and center topic of public discussion with the violent killings of blacks all over the news. But this is not “news.” Video and images capturing unwarranted use of force are a wake up call. But, in truth, this call has been sounded for over 400 years, and many of us have pressed the “snooze button.”
The selection of Life and Death in Rikers Island is important and timely as we are in the midst of alarmingly high COVID-19 rates across the country, especially in prisons.
In June of 2008, on the eve of the election of Barack Obama as the first black president of the United States, Yale University scholar Elijah Anderson published an astute collection of essays and writings on the condition of the young, black man in America.
As CPO is called to engage with more needs found in community reentry, Hannah and I chose to read The Second Chance Club this month. In a wide-eyed, self-deprecating way, the author Jason Hardy recalls his start as a parole officer in New Orleans.
Amidst the crisis of pandemic, which—because of the same racist policies Kendi outlines in his book—disproportionately affects Black and Brown lives, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and George Floyd were murdered.
In June of 2008, on the eve of the election of Barack Obama as the first black president of the United States, Yale University scholar Elijah Anderson published an astute collection of essays and writings on the condition of the young, black man in America.
The men in Just Mercy are difficult for the reader to leave behind. A memoir written by attorney and founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, Bryan Stevenson, Just Mercy tells the stories of men left behind in one of the most hopeless of places: death row.