Audio

How The Police Became Untouchable : Fresh Air
How The Police Became Untouchable : Fresh Air
UCLA law professor Joanna Schwartz talks about the legal protections — including qualified immunity and no-knock warrants — that have protected officers from the repercussions of abuse. Her book is Shielded.Also, David Bianculli reviews Mel Brooks' History of the World Part II on Hulu.
·npr.org·
How The Police Became Untouchable : Fresh Air
A world without bail?
A world without bail?
Listen to this episode from Today, Explained on Spotify. With the wave of protests came waves of arrests and record-breaking donations to bail funds across the US, but reformers hope for a reckoning of one of the only for-profit bail systems in the world. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
·open.spotify.com·
A world without bail?
What “abolish the police” means
What “abolish the police” means
Listen to this episode from Today, Explained on Spotify. It’s not what you think. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
·open.spotify.com·
What “abolish the police” means
Suave
Suave
The U.S is the only country in the world that allows minors to be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Approximately 2,500 juveniles have been effectively sentenced to die in prison—considered “irredeemable” by the state for crimes committed when they were just teenagers. One of them was David Luis “Suave” Gonzalez, who entered prison at 17 expecting to leave in a coffin. Suave tells the story of what happens when your whole world is a prison cell, and you suddenly get a second chance at life. It’s the story of one man’s incarceration and redemption and an unusual relationship between a journalist and a source.
·beta.prx.org·
Suave
Somebody
Somebody
Fearless, adversarial journalism that holds the powerful accountable.
·theintercept.com·
Somebody
Prison Radio
Prison Radio
Bringing the voices of incarcerated people into the public debate Support our work: Donate Shop Join Us
·prisonradio.org·
Prison Radio
Murderville
Murderville
Murderville, an investigative podcast hosted by senior Intercept reporters Liliana Segura and Jordan Smith, examines the systemic failures that lead to wrongful convictions.
·theintercept.com·
Murderville
Minneapolis commits to “dismantling” the police
Minneapolis commits to “dismantling” the police
Listen to this episode from Today, Explained on Spotify. Minneapolis City Council member Alondra Cano explains what the city wants to do and what might get in the way. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
·open.spotify.com·
Minneapolis commits to “dismantling” the police
MASS EXONERATION
MASS EXONERATION
From Boston, Massachusetts, this is Mass Exoneration, a new podcast about people convicted of crimes — crimes they never committed — and what happened next, for them, and for the people they had to leave behind. At first, no one believed they were innocent. Now, they're free to tell their stories — and so are their children, their parents, their lawyers. Everyone who lived through it, from arrest to exoneration.
·massexoneration.com·
MASS EXONERATION
Ear Hustle
Ear Hustle
Ear Hustle brings you the daily realities of life inside prison, shared by those living it, and stories from the outside, post-incarceration.
·earhustlesq.com·
Ear Hustle
Can Congress reform the police?
Can Congress reform the police?
Listen to this episode from Today, Explained on Spotify. The United States has a policing problem and Congress wants to fix it. Vox’s Li Zhou explains whether the Democrats’ new bill will go anywhere. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
·open.spotify.com·
Can Congress reform the police?
Beyond Prisons: A Podcast On Prison Abolition
Beyond Prisons: A Podcast On Prison Abolition
Hosts Kim Wilson and Brian Sonenstein interview activists, artists, scholars, and impacted people about prison abolition and transformative justice.
·beyond-prisons.com·
Beyond Prisons: A Podcast On Prison Abolition
REVISITED: Abolishing Prisons With Mariame Kaba
REVISITED: Abolishing Prisons With Mariame Kaba
If You Want To Understand The Conversation Around Abolishing The Police, You Should Start Here. We Can’t Think Of A Better Time For An Encore Presentation Of This 2019 Episode With Mariame Kaba On How To Radically Rethink Our Approach To Public Safety And What It Would Look Like If We Got Rid Of The Criminal Justice System As We Know It. What If We Just Got Rid Of Prisons? The United States Is The Epicenter Of Mass Incarceration – But Exactly What Is It We Hope To Get Out Of Putting People In Prisons? And Whatever Your Answer Is To That – Is It Working? It’s Worthwhile To Stop And Interrogate Our Intentions About Incarceration And Whether It Enacts Justice Or Instead Satisfies Some Urge To Punish. Prison Abolitionist Mariame Kaba Wants Us To Explore Some Truly Radical Notions That Force Us To Inspect Those Instincts Towards Punishment. Hear Her Dismantle What She Calls The Current "Criminal Punishment System" And Instead Employ The Ideology Of Restorative Justice. RELATED LINKS The Color Complex By Kathy Russel, Midge Wilson, And Ronald Hall Locking Up Our Own By James Forman Jr Circles And Ciphers Project NIA
·audacy.com·
REVISITED: Abolishing Prisons With Mariame Kaba
Justice in America Episode 20: Mariame Kaba and Prison Abolition
Justice in America Episode 20: Mariame Kaba and Prison Abolition
Josie and Clint talk about prison abolition with Mariame Kaba, director of Project NIA, the co-founder of Survived + Punished and a researcher in residence at Barnard Center for Research on Women.
·theappeal.org·
Justice in America Episode 20: Mariame Kaba and Prison Abolition
Prison Abolitionism: Abolitionist Feminism and the Anarchist Black Cross
Prison Abolitionism: Abolitionist Feminism and the Anarchist Black Cross
Victoria Law, who is familiarly known as Vikki, is an anarchist activist, writer, freelance editor, photographer and mother. Law is of Chinese descent and was born and raised in Queens NY where she had her first brush with the law as an armed robber while still in high school. Her exposure to incar…
·podcasts.apple.com·
Prison Abolitionism: Abolitionist Feminism and the Anarchist Black Cross
Reparations For Police Brutality : Planet Money
Reparations For Police Brutality : Planet Money
For years, some Chicago police officers tortured suspects. Survivors fought for reparations — and got them. | Subscribe to our weekly newsletter here.
·npr.org·
Reparations For Police Brutality : Planet Money
Mass Incarceration : Throughline
Mass Incarceration : Throughline
The United States imprisons more people than any other country in the world, and a disproportionate number of those prisoners are Black. What are the origins of the U.S. criminal justice system and how did racism shape it? From the creation of the first penitentiaries in the 1800s, to the "tough-on-crime" prosecutors of the 1990s, how America created a culture of mass incarceration.
·npr.org·
Mass Incarceration : Throughline
Rethinking American Policing : Fresh Air
Rethinking American Policing : Fresh Air
We talk with ​journalist ​Jamiles Lartey about systemic racism in American policing​. ​He writes about criminal justice, race and policing for the non-profit news organization 'The Marshall Project.' ​"Policing wasn't always this way. It wasn't always this big. It wasn't always this bureaucratic," he says. "Sometimes as a society, you need to rethink institutions."
·npr.org·
Rethinking American Policing : Fresh Air
Most Prisoners Can't Vote, But They're Still Counted In Voting Districts
Most Prisoners Can't Vote, But They're Still Counted In Voting Districts
For the redrawing of voting maps, some states are making a little-known change to their census numbers that is expected to shift political power away from rural, predominantly white prison towns.
·npr.org·
Most Prisoners Can't Vote, But They're Still Counted In Voting Districts
Black Lives Matter: Five Years On | The Takeaway | WNYC Studios
Black Lives Matter: Five Years On | The Takeaway | WNYC Studios
Five years after Black Lives Matter coalesced into a national movement for social and racial justice, co-founder Patrisse Cullors reflects on the group's progress and impact.
·wnycstudios.org·
Black Lives Matter: Five Years On | The Takeaway | WNYC Studios
The View from Somewhere - How Black Lives Matter Changed the News on Stitcher
The View from Somewhere - How Black Lives Matter Changed the News on Stitcher
Before 2014, police killings of unarmed Black people weren’t a huge news story. Washington Post reporter Wesley Lowery, Ferguson activist Johnetta Elzie, and host Lewis Raven Wallace look at how media reacted after police killed Michael Brown in 2014, and how #BlackLivesMatter changed the news. Wallace and Lowery reflect on how “objective” outlets failed to cover Black death at the hands of police until activists forced their hand.
·stitcher.com·
The View from Somewhere - How Black Lives Matter Changed the News on Stitcher