OUR WORK

When they went in, the internet was little more than a pipe dream. But emerging 30 years later into a world ruled by the internet, getting a job suddenly felt like learning a foreign language, and what little support they were offered ultimately left more questions than answers.

Eugene Youngblood, Felicia Dixon, Ellis Hopkins, Quinton Smith, and David King describe job hunting, getting an apartment, undergoing a gender transition, and getting an education on our new series, THE DIGITAL DIVIDE. Made in collaboration with THE STAR PROJECT.

In Tech We Trust

An overview of access to changing technology while inside prison

A New Normal

Adapting to a vastly different reality filled with inscrutable new tech — and a deadly disease

Concrete Classroom

Canvas, Zoom, and socially distanced learning — learning to ditch the notebook and pencil

Steady Support

Finding a support system — and romance — in a completely transformed social sphere

An Informed Transition

Navigating the complexities of being transgender in prison — who’s on your side, how do you know your options?

Nearly 30 years ago, Sister Helen Prejean sat down and wrote “Dead Man Walking,” her testimony to the horrors of witnessing a human being executed at the hands of the government, and her call to rise up and challenge the systems that support the death penalty.

In “Sister Abolitionist,” she sits down with Unincarcerated Productions to reflect back on writing the book that changed her life, setting her on the trajectory of becoming one of the world’s leading death penalty abolitionists, and changing hearts and minds around the world.

Join Billy and Jodie as they tackle difficult topics and come to grips with injustice, corruption, and human rights violations resulting from Retributive Justice and guide us towards a vision of Restorative Justice.