Founding Failures: The Consequences of the Constitution’s Original Sin for Our Criminal Legal System

Date 

Add to My Calendar Tuesday, March 30, 2021 12:30pm to 1:45pm

Location 

Since its inception, the U.S. Constitution has implicitly and explicitly approved of the institution of slavery and the racial caste system it necessitated. That legacy has deeply influenced how our nation's criminal legal system has operated to control and abuse Black bodies—as well as the bodies of other people of color—and destabilize their communities through over-criminalization, over-policing, and over-incarceration. Racism is so endemic in our criminal legal system that even laws that should protect Black communities, such as those aimed at white supremacist terror, hate crimes, and gun violence, ultimately end up disproportionately enforced against the people in those communities.

Join the American Constitution Society (ACS) for a discussion that explores these issues and considers how restorative justice and other less traditional approaches might offer a path toward maintaining public safety without further empowering a criminal legal system tainted by a legacy of institutional racism.

 

Register for the event here


Introductory Remarks:
Russ Feingold, President, American Constitution Society

Featuring:
I. Bennett Capers, Professor of Law and Director of the Center on Race, Law and Justice, Fordham University Law School

Seema Gajwani, Special Counsel for Juvenile Justice Reform and Chief of the Restorative Justice Program Section, District of Columbia Office of the Attorney General

Taja-Nia Henderson, Professor of Law (on leave) and Dean, Rutgers University Graduate School-Newark

Vincent Warren, Executive Director, Center for Constitutional Rights


Note: This event has been approved for 1 hour of CLE credit. Please find the reading materials here, as well as the Record of AttendanceCertificate of Attendance, and Evaluation Form.

Last modified 

March 26, 2021