Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2015) |
The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program (Inside-Out) is an international educational program based in Philadelphia at Temple University.[1] Inside-Out was established by Lori Pompa in 1997 to bring traditional college students and incarcerated persons together in semester-long courses to explore and learn about issues of crime and justice from behind prison walls. The program was founded on the hypothesis that incarcerated and non-incarcerated students might mutually benefit from studying together as peers.
The program provides individuals on both sides of the prison walls the unique opportunity to engage in a collaborative, dialogic examination of issues of social significance through the particular lens that is the "prism of prison." Through college classes and community exchanges, the program seeks to deepen the conversation about and transform our approaches to understanding crime, justice, freedom, inequality, and other issues of social concern. Inside-Out creates a paradigm shift for participants, encouraging transformation and change in individuals and, in so doing, serves as an engine for social change. Since its inception, students of Inside-Out both inside and outside have time and again claimed that the experience transformed the ways they viewed themselves and the world.[citation needed]
History
The idea for the Inside-Out program came from a visit by Temple University professor Lori Pompa and a group of undergraduate to the Pennsylvania state correctional facility in Dallas, PA, in 1995. Following a panel discussion with a group of prisoners, one of the panelists suggested that the discussion could be expanded to a semester-long course.[2]
In 1997, this became the first Inside-Out program, launched as a partnership between Temple University and the Philadelphia Prison System. In 2002 this expanded to take in Craterford Prison, a state facility. The program at Craterford became the Craterford Think Tank, and in 2004 this launched training sessions for instructors from other universities to expand the program.[2] By 2015, over 20,000 students and prisoners had studied on Inside-Out programs and it had expanded to over 130 institutions, including Ohio State University and Stanford University. The first international programs e were established in Canada in 2011.Cite error: A <ref>
tag is missing the closing </ref>
(see the help page).[3][4][5]
Inside-Out courses
As of November 2023[update], more than 1,200 Inside-Out courses have been held around the world. Over 150 higher education institutions, partnered with over 200 correctional institutions, have hosted courses. Courses cover a wide range of academic disciplines, including: African-American studies, anthropology, communications, criminal justice, economics, education, English, gender studies, history, law, natural sciences, nursing, philosophy, political science, psychology, public health, religious studies, social work, sociology, theater, visual arts, and women’s studies.[6] As of November 2023,[update] Inside-Out courses are taught in the Australia, Canada, Denmark, Ireland, Mexico, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[7]
References
- ^ Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program Homepage
- ^ a b "About Us". Inside-Out. The Story of Inside-Out. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
- ^ Professor Fiona Measham, Dr Kate O’Brien, Dr Hannah King, Dr Ivan Hill, Diana Scott (Durham University); Dr Caroline Chatwin, Dr Camille Stengal, Dr Marianne Duggan (University of Kent); Tom Raymen (University of Plymouth); Dr Eric Baumgartner, Dr Laura Goldsack (University of Teesside); Dr Joey Whitfield (University of Leeds); Dr Anne Schwan (Edinburgh Napier University) (15 November 2023). "The Inside-Out prison education programme was a true trailblazer". The Guardian – Letters.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Durham University's Inside-Out scheme sees students study with prisoners". BBC News. 30 January 2016.
- ^ Sally Guyoncourt (25 January 2016). "Prisoners study alongside Durham University undergraduates in unique criminology course". The Independent.
- ^ "The International Network". The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
- ^ "Higher Education Partners". The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
External links
- Tyrone Werts, consultant for the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program interviewed on Conversations from Penn State