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Liman Panel Discussions

Upcoming Events

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The Price of Labor: Immigration, Organization & Economic Policy

Wednesday, September 24, 12:10-1 PM

YLS; room TBA

Featuring Professor Muneer I. Ahmad, of the YLS Workers and Immigrant Rights Advocacy Clinic, Bhairavi Desai, Co-Founder and Executive Director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, and Ibrahim Diallo, Liman’s Senior Fellow in Residence.

Cosponsored by the Ludwig Program in Public Sector Leadership. Open to the YLS community. Register here.

THE STRIKE Screening and Discussion

Wednesday, October 15, 6:30-8:30 PM

YLS; room TBA

A new documentary chronicles how thousands of incarcerated individuals at California’s Pelican Bay State Prison overcame decades of extreme solitary confinement practices by orchestrating the largest prison hunger strike in U.S. history. The screening will be followed by a discussion with JoeBill Muñoz, one of the directors, and Michael Saavedra, one of the strikers featured in the documentary.

Cosponsored by the Yale Investigative Reporting Lab, the Yale Prison Education Initiative, the Yale Ludwig Program in Public Sector Leadership, and the Quinnipiac-Yale Dispute Resolution Workshop. Open to the Yale University and Quinnipiac Law School communities. Register here.

Detention, Health and Gender

November 14, 2024
Cosponsored with the Women Faculty Forum in collaboration with SEICHE Center for Health & Justice at Yale School of Medicine and the Solomon Center for Health Law & Policy at Yale Law School

A panel discussion on the weight of detention on communities and individuals that will explore these issues through the lens of gender, incarceration, and the structures of health care for people in detention after their release.

The Visiting Room Project @ Yale

March 30–31, 2023
Cosponsored with the Law and Racial Justice Center at Yale Law School

The Visiting Room Project is a digital experience that invites the public to sit face-to-face with people serving life without the possibility of parole to hear them tell their stories, in their own words. More than five years in the making, the project’s website is the only collection of its kind, containing over 100 filmed interviews with people currently serving life without parole. The interviews were filmed at Angola, the Louisiana State Penitentiary, which is, in many ways, the epicenter of life without parole sentences worldwide. As of 2022, more than 55,000 Americans are living in prisons serving life without parole, their lives largely hidden from public view. From March 30–31, creators of the project and some men featured in the interviews who have since been released will visit Yale to talk about their experiences and their hopes for the project’s impact.

Crossing Divides

Feb. 8, 2023

Judith Resnik, Arthur Liman Professor of Law, will moderate a discussion between 3rd circuit judges Cheryl Krause and Stephanos Bibas about political polarization, their friendship across ideological divides, and their forthcoming joint book project.

Seeing Solitary: Documenting and Digitalizing Data on Isolation in Prisons

Nov. 2, 2022

Join the Liman Center for the launch of the website Seeing Solitary, which digitalizes the data from a decade of surveys and reports on the use of solitary confinement. The discussion will cover the findings, the research process, and ways advocates can access this data to help efforts to abolish the practice of solitary confinement.

Rethinking Rehabilitation: Noncustodial Punishment, Coercive Surveillance, and Mental Health Treatment in Connecticut

Oct. 25, 2022

Please join Dr. Kathryn Thomas and Hannah Duncan for an information session and lunch talk focused on supervised release and other forms of noncustodial punishment in Connecticut. Many conditions of release require justice-involved individuals to participate in substance use and mental health counseling. However, the quality of these treatment options, and accommodations for justice-involved individuals, are understudied and can increase the likelihood of future criminal justice contact.

Incarceration and Imagination

Oct. 14, 2022

This symposium seeks to understand both how a society imagines its prisons, and how the prisons themselves work upon the imaginations of those they incarcerate and those beyond their walls. It focuses on writings, films, and TV serials about life behind bars. To what extent has society repressed its dependence on prisons? How is it haunted by their existence? What does imprisonment do to the mind, and what can we learn about inner life and self-understanding from the incarcerated?

Echoes of Attica

Sept. 12, 2022

The Liman Center will host Echoes of Attica, a performance about the 1971 uprising at Attica Prison and its aftermath. The play features original songs written and performed by Philadelphia rap poet and activist BL Shirelle and the gospel singer Simply Naomi. Based on court transcripts, recently released FBI files, and interviews with eyewitnesses, the show will be introduced by Carlos Roche — who survived the assault of Attica — and feature a post-performance panel discussion about U.S. prisons, past and present.