Eve Abrams: The human stories behind mass incarceration
Eve Abrams makes radio stories, mostly about her adopted hometown, New Orleans. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
thrown into the back of a squad car
confusing system
more people than any other nation
is likely what we see on TV.
Before my son went to jail,
didn't do it and this person is innocent."
or you dismiss them,
who deserve to be in prison.
people that's in jail.
is one of those innocent people.
on a manslaughter charge.
evidence in the case.
on the basis of eyewitness testimony,
isn't as reliable
was first used to free innocent people,
were based on eyewitness testimony.
prosecuted McKinley's case
corruption charges.
of 30 years stepped down,
from McKinley's case came forward
into testifying by the district attorneys,
the threat of jail time.
for me to imagine
people are locked up
to around 87,000 people:
the roughly half a million people
for weeks upon months,
have family on the outside.
missed my high school graduation
he went to jail.
at the wrong time.
when he ended up going to jail,
or did he just get taken to jail?
when I went to her college classroom
Troylynn Robertson,
that you went through
I would tell you when you have them,
that will initially come to mind is love
to raise them
about the boogeyman,
how to watch out for the judicial system.
our criminal legal system
people of color,
like Kortney to know about it.
to talk to students about "Unprisoned,"
of the young people I spoke with
is like finding out where he's at,
on my first birthday.
Casey Foundation,
incarcerated rose 500 percent
will see a parent incarcerated
affects African American children.
will see their dad go off to prison.
of one in 30 for white children.
success of both inmates and their children
during the parent's incarceration,
can cost 20 to 30 times more
keep in touch through letters.
that kept it real with me.
the last time I seen you.
can't you believe it?
walk across the stage.
because I know it's boring in there.
tucked into the frame
that there's a good reason
to properly turn,
in school look really different
and jails and courtrooms.
into that courtroom and you're just --
and it still catches your breath.
people of color here,"
made up of 90 percent African Americans,
of the people who are in orange
Engelberg isn't the only one noticing
are in municipal court --
waiting to see the judge?
African-Americans, like me.
85 percent black.
in the box back there, who locked up.
of white people in there.
85 percent African-American
growing up in America today
was about a troupe of dancers
called "Hoods Up,"
in front of city council.
for that performance.
black with hoodies because Trayvon Martin,
he was killed.
hoodies like Trayvon Martin.
with that idea?
but I had stick through it though,
so they could notice what we do.
was another choreographer and dancer
people who look like him.
other black people may have done.
the police to look at you,
you're threatening?
a lot of black males
that about me.
thing to do is to not pay attention --
legal system is working.
to question those assumptions,
learning about mass incarceration,
throws so many lives into chaos,
has to be understanding.
to understand our connection to this issue
It's on our shoulders
just closing that door
we've lived that history:
closes their back on one section,
the pronouns "us" and "we"
who operate these systems
locking up innocent people
who fear being labeled "soft on crime,"
toward locking people up.
has fed a police culture
to conduct thorough investigations
of those investigations.
over the last couple of decades,
have both fell,
and cases they have filed has risen.
whether or not to take legal action
a defendant potentially faces behind bars.
on prosecutors is defense.
in our judicial system.
government-appointed attorneys.
receive around 30 percent less funding
far outnumbering
Association recommends.
the guilty from the innocent
so heavily against defendants,
operates for we the people.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Eve Abrams - Audio documentarianEve Abrams makes radio stories, mostly about her adopted hometown, New Orleans.
Why you should listen
Eve Abrams is an award-winning radio producer, writer, audio documentarian and educator. She produces the audio project Unprisoned, piloted through AIR’s Finding America initiative, which tells how mass incarceration affects people serving time outside and investigates why Louisiana is the world’s per-capita incarceration capital. Unprisoned received a Gabriel Award and was a 2017 Peabody Finalist. Abrams's 2015 documentary Along Saint Claude chronicles 300 years of change in New Orleans and received an Edward R. Murrow award. Her project Documenting Preservation Hall was exhibited at the Louisiana State Museum and became a book.
Abrams's writing appears in Unfathomable City: A New Orleans Atlas, Fourth Genre and Louisiana Cultural Vistas, and her radio works can be heard on a host of national programs including "Morning Edition" and "Reveal." Abrams is a Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Artist as Activist Fellow. She has been teaching for 25 years and currently teaches for the Society for Relief of Destitute Orphan Boys.
Eve Abrams | Speaker | TED.com