Making Amends

Steve Herbert

How prisoners pursue atonement in an age of mass incarceration.

  • 29 minutes 2 seconds
    S 2 E 6: ”This Really Humanized The Criminal Justice System”

    So, what did it mean for the prosecutors to engage in intensive conversations with prisoners?  What lessons did everyone learn?

    27 March 2023, 10:23 am
  • 33 minutes 22 seconds
    S 2 E 5: ”You Get To The Point Where You’re Doing Dead Time”

    Despite the difficult conditions of prison, many people inside find a pathway to self-improvement.  How is that possible?  Are there changes in criminal justice policy that even prosecutors could support that would make transformations inside more likely?

    25 March 2023, 11:37 am
  • 27 minutes 29 seconds
    S 2 E 4: ”How Am I Going To Be A Better Person After This Time?”

    In Oregon and elsewhere, many people convicted by prosecutors of a violent crime are given a long and fixed sentence.  What does it mean to go prison on such a sentence?  What can prisoners teach prosecutors about the experience of doing time?

    24 March 2023, 11:12 am
  • 34 minutes 20 seconds
    S 2 E 3: ”We As Prosecutors Have A Lot Of Power”

    What is it like to be prosecuted for a violent crime?  On the way toward getting a conviction, do you have any reason to take accountability for your actions?

    23 March 2023, 10:50 am
  • 28 minutes 30 seconds
    S 2 E 2: ”Hurt People Hurt People”

    How do people come to commit violent acts?  What can prosecutors learn by listening to stories of how people ended up in prison?

    22 March 2023, 11:44 am
  • 34 minutes 34 seconds
    S 2 E 1: ”That’s a Big Responsibility”

    What do prosecutors do? Why do they pursue prison sentences when they charge people with violent offenses?  What do they think incarceration accomplishes?

    21 March 2023, 11:33 am
  • 2 minutes 45 seconds
    Season Two: The Trailer

    Long prison sentences for violent crimes have made the United States  the most punitive nation in history.  And it is prosecutors who secure the convictions that generate those long prison terms.

    But what do prosecutors know about what happens to those they convict?  What might happen if a group of prosecutors went inside the walls, and talked to prisoners about the heavy use of incarceration as a response to violence?  What can they learn from each other, and what can we learn from listening in?

    11 March 2023, 7:58 pm
  • 30 minutes 15 seconds
    S1 E8: ’We’re Genuinely Trying To Repair That Harm’

    How can convicted criminals fully appreciate the impact of their actions?  If that might involve communication with their victims, how can that occur?  Can American prisons embrace the principles of restorative justice, and help create communities where remorse can be expressed and genuine change facilitated?

    27 December 2020, 4:29 pm
  • 25 minutes 42 seconds
    S1 E7: ’It Does Let Us Off The Hook’

    To make amends requires accepting responsibility for the harm you’ve caused.  But in an adversarial legal process, how easy is it to take accountability for criminal wrongs, especially in the age of mass incarceration?    

    27 December 2020, 4:29 pm
  • 26 minutes 55 seconds
    S1 E6: ’Something Positive The Universe Gains’

    What debts do we owe after committing a crime?  How does one repair the moral fabric after a serious wrong?  The men describe the importance of repentance to them, and how they try to make that real in their everyday actions.  

    27 December 2020, 4:28 pm
  • 26 minutes 35 seconds
    S1 E5: ’Put a Little More Air In His Balloon’

    To recognize that one has done wrong often motivates a desire to do right.  Prisoners seeking to atone try to do good works in an environment where positivity is not usually celebrated.  

     

    27 December 2020, 4:28 pm
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