Better not Bitter, Living in Pursuit of Racial Justice
Episode Details
Better not Bitter, Living in Pursuit of Racial Justice
Yusef Salaam is the inspirational speaker and prison reform activist who, at age fourteen, was one of the five teenage boys wrongly convicted and sentenced to prison in the Central Park jogger case. In 1997, he left prison as an adult to a world he didn't fully recognize or understand. In 2002, the sentences for the Central Park Five were overturned, and all Five were exonerated for the crime they didn't commit. Yusef now travels the world as an inspirational speaker, speaking about the effects of incarceration and the devastating impact of disenfranchisement. He is an advocate and educator on issues of mass incarceration, police brutality, and misconduct, press ethics and bias, race and law, and the disparities in the criminal justice system, especially for men of color.
Ekow N. Yankah holds degrees from the University of Michigan, Columbia Law School, and Oxford University. His work focuses on questions of political and criminal theory and, particularly, questions of political obligation and justifications of punishment. His work has appeared in law review articles, peer-reviewed legal theory journals, books, and medical journals, including NOMOS, Ratio Juris, Law and Philosophy, Criminal Law and Philosophy, the Fordham Law Review and the Illinois Law Review among others. His interests have also led him to develop expertise in voting rights and election law, serving as the co-chair of the New York Democratic Lawyers Council as well as the voting rights arm of the New York Democratic party. He maintains a public presence writing for publications spanning The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, and Salon among others and has been a regular commentator on criminal law issues on television and radio including NBC, CNN, MSNBC, BBC, BBC International, NPR and PBS.