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<div class="moz-forward-container"><big><big> </big></big><big><big>"Real
Women. Real Voices: The Movement of Formerly Incarcerated
Women to End Mass Incarceration" <br>
</big></big><big><big>Andrea James, Executive Director of
Families for Justice as Healing</big></big><br>
MONDAY <big>Nov. 3, 6:30 p.m. Campus Center 162</big><br>
<br>
Andrea James has worked within the criminal justice system for
more than 25 years, including as a criminal defense attorney,
when she provided zealous representation for families within her
community of Roxbury, Massachusetts. In 2009, she was sentenced
to a 24-month federal prison sentence, part of which she served
at the federal prison camp for women in Danbury, Connecticut.
Even after a lifetime of work seeking justice on behalf of
disenfranchised people, she was stunned by what she encountered
upon entering the prison system as an incarcerated person. Since
her release, Andrea James has mobilized to support incarcerated
and formerly incarcerated women and their children through the
organization Families for Justice as Healing, a criminal justice
reform organization advocating for community wellness
initiatives to replace the war on drugs and incarceration. She
has also published a book on her experiences, <i>Upper Bunkies
Unite: And Other Thoughts on the Politics of Mass
Incarceration</i>. Through this work, she is fulfilling the
promise she made to the women who remain in prison—to speak
their truth, advocate for an end to the war on drugs, and
support a shift toward community wellness.<br>
<br>
STPEC is proud to sponsor Andrea James's visit to UMass as part
of our effort to support UMass programming on prison reform and
prison abolition. Ms. James will also be visiting STPEC's
First-Year Faculty Seminar "The Prison-Industrial Complex and
Prison Abolitionism," co-taught by STPEC director Sigrid
Schmalzer and STPEC student Emily Shepard, and organized in
conjunction with the 2014 UMass Common Read, <i>Orange Is the
New Black</i>. <br>
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