Jarrell Daniels: What prosecutors and incarcerated people can learn from each other
Jarrell Daniels brings policy makers together with community members to improve social challenges, particularly among youth. Full bio
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at Columbia University,
a quarter of his life in state prison --
a man his life.
as a teenager in adult prison
environment of a classroom
I didn't think was possible for me
in a new college course
straightforward, though, right?
of eight incarcerated men
professor Geraldine Downey
starting college.
in the room would be white.
on the first day of class
I prayed I wouldn't.
it was just as a student,
about what had brought each of us
watched our mother suffer years of abuse
living in a shelter.
an oath to my family
like a teenager at 13,
burden on my shoulders,
after my 17th birthday,
to the laundromat,
attacked my sister.
I tried to pull one girl away,
brush across my face.
had leaped out of the crowd and cut me.
his knife toward me again,
and pulled that gun from my waistband
his life that day.
I was paralyzed in fear.
in a case of mistaken identity,
nor was I qualified,
that I thought I needed to be.
after hearing my story,
I never wanted to hurt anyone.
in each of their faces
men in the room.
to break free of.
who commit terrible crimes.
of these individuals' lives
these prosecutors had never heard.
to speak -- the prosecutors --
drones or robocops,
the power of law to protect people.
that I could definitely understand.
Nick, a fellow incarcerated student,
around the racial bias and discrimination
to talk about justice reform
the prosecutors' response.
a senior prosecutor, agreed with Nick
the mass incarceration of people of color,
in the right direction.
about our justice system
programs inside of the prison.
to the advice of elders --
the rest of their lives in prison.
my mindset around manhood.
all of their aspirations and goals,
return to prison,
as their ambassador to the free world.
turning on for one prosecutor,
despite my incarceration
hadn't thought much about
after they win a conviction.
of sitting in a classroom,
that keeping us locked up
the prosecutors were excited,
for life after being released.
how rough it was actually going to be.
ADA's face when it hit her:
with our freedom
just released from prison.
this would create for us
for the choice we had to make
overcrowded apartment.
policy recommendations.
of Corrections commissioner
Columbia auditorium.
a more memorable way
after coming home from prison,
to share my perspective
in the audience.
who prosecuted my case.
a long prison sentence,
about being in that room with me,
about working together
of our community.
Youth Council at Columbia University,
who have already spent time locked up
enrolled in high school --
of our city's most vulnerable youth
within the criminal justice system.
has convinced us
out of social challenges.
will be in their hands.
the power of conversations
that is inclusive and unites us all
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jarrell Daniels - Justice and education scholar, activistJarrell Daniels brings policy makers together with community members to improve social challenges, particularly among youth.
Why you should listen
Jarrell Daniels collaborates with policy makers, civil servants, academics and community organizers to create a new vision for the criminal legal system -- shaping policies that help individuals, families and communities thrive. At Columbia University, he is an Open Society Youth Activist Fellow, Justice-in-Education Scholar, program manager of the Justice Ambassadors Youth Council and a member of the Formerly Incarcerated Reintegration Science Training (FIRST) program. His primary focus is bringing policy makers together with community members to work across differences to improve social challenges, particularly among youth. In his work with young people, he explains the extent to which mass incarceration and criminalization impacts minority communities.
Since his release from prison, Daniels has become a sought-after speaker on college campuses, sharing the experiences that led to his incarceration and introducing strategies to reduce incarceration and recidivism rates. His work focuses on changing the narrative of the criminal justice system from one that relies on punitive responses to one where justice and democracy is applied equally to all. As a result of his dedication to equal human rights, he became an Annie E. Casey Youth Advisory Council Member and serves as a youth advocate and peer mentor for Friends of the Island Academy. Daniels offers advice for justice-involved youth reemerging from Rikers Island and juvenile detention centers throughout New York City, as well as teens struggling to find social balance.
Jarrell Daniels | Speaker | TED.com