Tuesday 5 February 2019

Youth, Design, and Juvenile Justice Reform





Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration public event with Chris Rudd, Founder & Lead Activator at ChiByDesign, who will discuss community activism, juvenile justice, and urban renewal.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019
5:00pm – 6:15pm
Room 003, Rockefeller Center
Sponsored by: Rockefeller Center

In 2014, youth from Chicago created a tech tool that opened up a needed path to a 2nd chance for thousands of their peers. Mr. Rudd will discuss the process these young people undertook to create the tool and the effects it has on the justice system in Illinois.

Chris Rudd is a human-centered designer and  community organizer with a passion for social justice. He has worked with youth on the South and West Sides of Chicago, challenging them to engage with their communities through activism and technology. Rudd has helped youth from Chicago to the Bay Area design eight civic apps, including Expunge.io.

Rudd completed a year-long fellowship at Stanford’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (the d.school). As a Civic Innovation Fellow, he spent a year immersed in graduate courses learning, applying, and honing his skills in the human-centered design methodology. Currently, Rudd is working with the Institute of Design at IIT and leading ChiByDesign, a Black-owned and people of color-led human-centered design firm. ChiByDesign believes that empowering the people who are directly affected by issues with the tools and mindsets of design thinking can unlock limitless creative and effective solutions.

Monday 4 February 2019

Juvenile lifer Trevor Brownlee paroled after 29 years in prison



Trevor Brownlee poses at Center for Hope, 812 Root St. in Flint Tuesday, Dec. 18 2019. Brownlee, who was sentenced to life in prison at 16 and paroled 29 years later after a 2018 resentencing, says he sees his reintegration into society as a total success.

Newark Youth Court gives juvenile offenders a jury of their peers





How should efforts to implement criminal justice reform handle minor offenses committed by juveniles? Officials in Newark, New Jersey, are trying a new approach: municipal courts, public schools and police have aligned to develop an alternative sentencing program for teenagers: Newark Youth Court. This NewsHour Shares is provided by 12-year-old Yasmeena Sharif for our Student Reporting Labs.