The Politics of Criminal Justice

  • In-Person
  • NYU Constance Milstein and Family Global Academic Center
    1307 L Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20005
  • 9:30AM – 11AM EDT
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In
the five years since Marc Levin founded Right on Crime at the
conservative Texas Policy Foundation, more than a dozen states have
enacted sentencing or other prison reforms. Parallel movements among
conservatives and progressives have promoted similar reforms from
dramatically different ideological starting-places. Prominent national
Republicans have announced changes of heart, and then-Attorney General
Eric Holder announced that the Justice Department would no longer pursue
mandatory minimum sentences for low-level drug felonies. As the push
for criminal justice reform gathered steam at the federal level, it has
garnered recent headlines as much for the cross-ideological nature of
leadership behind it as for specific reform proposals.

How durable is this right-left partnership against the backdrop of 2016 Presidential politics? Join New America and the Brennan Center to hear top actors from politics and policy look at what’s next for the criminal justice reform movement, including a discussion of the recent Brennan Center publication Solutions: American Leaders Speak Out on Criminal Justice, a bipartisan collection of essays on criminal justice reform by many of the leading 2016 presidential candidates.

Follow the discussion online using #RightLeftJustice and following @NewAmerica and @BrennanCenter.  

Participants:

Marc Levin
Founder and Policy Director, Right on Crime
Director, Center for Effective Justice, Texas Public Policy Foundation

Inimai Chettiar
Director, Justice Program, The Brennan Center for Justice
Editor, Solutions: American Leaders Speak Out on Criminal Justice

Jamelle Bouie
Staff Writer, Slate

Heather Hurlburt
Director, New Models of Policy Change, New America

In collaboration with:

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