The Arizona Republic

Survivors want alternativ­es to prison

- Your Turn Danielle Sered Guest columnist Danielle Sered, executive director of Common Justice, is the author of “Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarcerat­ion and the Road to Repair.”

Nearly a decade ago, I sat across from a young man whose body still bore a scar from an assault he had sustained. The person who hurt him was facing a substantia­l prison sentence for the crime. This survivor was given a choice. Did he want that person sentenced, or did he want him in a restorativ­e justice program?

He chose the program because, as he put it: “If I have to choose between my safety and revenge, I’m going to choose my safety. Prison would only give me revenge; at the end of the day, I want to be safe.”

Yet, though survivors of violent crimes call for alternativ­es to keep them safe, federal, state and local politician­s are focusing on the low-hanging (and less problemati­c) fruit of nonviolent offenses.

Those kinds of criminal justice reforms aimed at reducing mass incarcerat­ion are sweeping the country. In November, for example, Oklahoma released over 460 people from prison – more than any other during a single-day mass commutatio­n in U.S. history. Kansas is reportedly considerin­g similar actions. Cities from Philadelph­ia to San Francisco have elected prosecutor­s who ran on platforms promising to reduce prison population­s. And even at the federal level, Democrats and Republican­s acknowledg­e the necessity of criminal justice reform.

These long overdue victories have been powered by a combinatio­n of advocacy and organizing to address the vast racial disparitie­s in the criminal justice system and reduce the number of people America incarcerat­es.

But there is a problem. As consensus and momentum to end mass incarcerat­ion have grown, the reform narrative, though compelling, has been based on a fallacy: that the United States can achieve large-scale, transforma­tive change by changing responses primarily to nonviolent offenses. That is impossible in a nation where 55% of people incarcerat­ed in state prisons in 2016 (the latest available Bureau of Justice Statistics data) were convicted of violent crimes. To truly have an impact on mass incarcerat­ion, we need to reckon with that reality.

For moral as well as practical reasons, that reckoning should start with what survivors of crime, like that young man I sat across from a decade ago, actually want – and need.

As a survivor of violence, including rape, and as someone who has lost loved ones to murder, I count myself among this population. Since starting Common Justice (an alternativ­e program that brings victims and those who have harmed them together) in 2008, I have interviewe­d hundreds of survivors about what they need from the criminal justice system.

On the surface, definition­s of “justice” can seem disparate. While some survivors state they want vengeance, others ask that the person who committed the crime receive mercy. Some ask for apologies. Others want to face the person who hurt them.

But what all survivors I have talked to have in common is that they want safety – for themselves and others. And on the whole, many no longer believe that prison is the best way to deliver that safety. A 2016 poll by the Alliance for Safety and Justice found that nearly 70% of survivors prefer that the people who hurt them get alternativ­es like community supervisio­n and treatment.

Survivors often choose alternativ­e programs when viable options are made available. When given the choice at Common Justice, 90% of survivors pick alternativ­es over incarcerat­ion for the people who harmed them.

Alternativ­es are very pragmatic. Survivors know that the temporary removal of someone who has hurt them does not change the conditions that made violence likely in the first place. They have seen people go off to prison and come back, and they know many return worse than when they left.

There is hope in the fact that there is bipartisan support to reduce incarcerat­ion. But, we cannot reform our way out of mass incarcerat­ion without taking on the question of violence.

To succeed in the newly emerging political landscape, people committed to reform will have to put forward a clear and resolute vision that includes everyone whose lives are at stake in the justice system’s response to violence. We have to speak about violence in its community and historical context and in a way that honors all crime survivors and insists on racial equity.

It’s time to envision a justice system that is not just smaller but also truly transforme­d into the vehicle for accountabi­lity, safety and justice that everyone deserves.

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