Challenging the Criminalization of Trauma Survivors

This video explains the cycle of violence; how the criminal legal system further traumatizes survivors; and why non-carceral alternatives are necessary to break this cycle.
NEW YORK NEW YORK  OCTOBER 12 The group Survivors of Rikers family members of inmates and jail reform advocates gather...
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 12: The group Survivors of Rikers, family members of inmates and jail reform advocates gather outside of City Hall to demand reform at the Rikers Island jail on October 12, 2021 in New York City. Following a series of deaths of inmates and other issues with prisoners, a movement is growing to close the jail which houses thousands of New Yorkers waiting for trial. Staff shortages have also resulted in a chaotic situation at the facility. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Check out our entire award-winning video series on reimagining the criminal legal system.

What do successful alternatives to policing, prosecution, and prison actually look like? And how would they work? A group of Chicago’s leading public safety, health, and justice innovators gathered at the DePaul Art Museum last summer to provide much-needed clarity on these crucial questions.

Artists, survivors of violence, entrepreneurs and business leaders, public defenders, policy experts, restorative justice practitioners, and system-impacted people sat down for a series of conversations while exploring Remaking the Exceptional, a groundbreaking exhibition about torture and incarceration.

These conversations expose common myths about crime and punishment; they also explain a range of critical issues and innovations, including restorative justice, violence interruption, copaganda, pretrial detention, and the criminalization of trauma survivors, among others.

The following short film — the final in a series named after the exhibition and produced by Zealous, Truthout, and Teen Vogue — focuses on the criminalization of trauma survivors. It explains the cycle of violence and how people who cause harm are often survivors of violence themselves; how the criminal legal system further traumatizes survivors; and why non-carceral alternatives are necessary to break this cycle.

The film features health advocate and entrepreneur Tanya Lozano; Takenya Nixon from the Cook County Public Defender's Office; entrepreneur and trauma specialist Johnny Page; advocate and policy expert Briana Payton from the Chicago Appleseed Center for Fair Courts; and Love & Protect member Chez Rumpf.

Read more on the criminalization of trauma survivors from Teen Vogue and Truthout at https://www.teenvogue.com/tag/zealous.

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