Sybrina Fulton and Ronald Davis

Guns, Race and Children: Facing Up to the ‘Ugly Truth’

“A mother who loses a child, in the end, is a mother just trying to heal—no matter where she comes from or what color her skin is,” said Sybrina Fulton, mother of the slain Florida teen for whom the foundation is named.

[Photos] Homeless After Class

While many university students were concerned about parking or trying to avoid long lines to get their books, Jalyn was trying to find a place to live. She and her family have been homeless since the summer of 2012. Some days she is able to eat twice a day, others only once. Her financial aid was put on hold because she has not been able to confirm a home address in Georgia.

Field Notes: ‘You are conscious, but you are not intelligent’

Last week, the John Howard Association, Illinois' only nonpartisan prison watchdog and justice reform advocate, released “In Their Own Words, a report that chronicles the journey of six young serious offenders through Illinois’ criminal justice system, from arrest to incarceration.

No Country for Young Men

West Virginia confines juveniles at a rate 42 percent higher than the nation, and has had the largest jump in youth incarceration since 2001. The state places offenders as young as 10 in facilities such as detention centers and group homes.

Rikers Island

Rikers Island is Eliminating Juvenile Solitary Confinement. Now What?

For years, New York City’s Department of Correction has worked to conceal its practice of putting adolescent inmates in solitary confinement. But last week, the agency announced plans to eliminate such confinement for 16- and 17-year-old inmates.

OP-ED: Why Youth Employment Matters

The youth workforce development and juvenile justice reform fields have a lot in common and similar goals: They are both working to provide services and enhanced resources to increase positive life outcomes for vulnerable youth. Despite this fact, my experience has been that far too often people in the two fields don’t work together, or talk about their common goals. Previously, I was a public defender representing youth in Baltimore’s juvenile court and helping to run the juvenile justice agency in Washington. When I asked my clients what they needed to get back on the right track, almost all the youth I talked with said the same thing: a job, or the tools to get a job. To achieve that goal, young people need to continue their education.