In New York Law Journal, New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and the president of the Citizens Crime Commission describe our shared Neighborhood Justice Panels project for low-level offenses in the Bronx.
Due Process, a television documentary series on law and justice, profiles Judge Victoria Pratt and the work of Newark Community Solutions and explores the concept of "procedural justice."
The Red Hook Star-Revue profiles the Red Hook Community Justice Center's Peacemaking program and the neighborhood NYPD officer about to graduate from it.
The Center for Court Innovation, in partnership with the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Quinnipiac University School of Law, hosted Justice Innovation in Times of Change: New Challenges, New Opportunities, a one-day conference in September 2016, providing an opportunity for practitioners from both inside and outside the justice system to learn about a range of topics related to chronic lower-level offending.
Chicago Policy Review interviews Greg Berman, discussing the Center for Court Innovation's work and the importance of an effective criminal justice system.
In April 2016, more than 400 participants from 110 jurisdictions gathered in Chicago for a three-day meeting on how to reduce crime and incarceration while improving public trust in justice.
Procedural justice, and its intersections with race, policing, and justice system legitimacy, was a major theme of our summit on criminal justice challenges and innovative reform efforts.
The Belmont Revitalization Project is one of many initiatives being led by the Brownsville Community Justice Center, which seeks to transform the justice system in Brownsville, reduce crime and incarceration, and strengthen public trust in justice by providing alternatives to incarceration and creating opportunities for diversion for youth and community members who come into contact with the law.