DiscoverUCLA (Audio)Law Policy and Community Organizing: Direct Democracy as a Vehicle for Criminal Justice Reform
Law Policy and Community Organizing: Direct Democracy as a Vehicle for Criminal Justice Reform

Law Policy and Community Organizing: Direct Democracy as a Vehicle for Criminal Justice Reform

Update: 2019-03-27
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This panel explores how statewide direct democracy measures, including ballot initiatives, have propelled affirmative criminal justice reforms in jurisdictions with large Latinx populations. Panelists discuss the ways in which Latinx people were and were not meaningfully incorporated into the campaigns and subsequent implementation efforts for Florida’s Amendment 4, California’s Propositions 47 and 57, and a handful of drug referendums. This discussion focuses on lessons learned and highlight best practices as they relate to the ballot box and criminal justice reform. Ultimately, this discussion informs the capacity for meaningful reforms to integrate the needs of the Latinx community, including the potential for scale in other jurisdictions with large Latinx populations, like Arizona. Moderator: Sonja Diaz, UCLA Luskin School of Public Policy. Panelists: Tomas Robles, LUCHA; Juan Cartagena, LatinoJustice PRDLEF; Marisa Arrona, Californians for Safety and Justice. Series: "UCLA Law Review Symposium " [Public Affairs] [Show ID: 34538]
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The Med School Project

The Med School Project

2022-10-0819:30

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Law Policy and Community Organizing: Direct Democracy as a Vehicle for Criminal Justice Reform

Law Policy and Community Organizing: Direct Democracy as a Vehicle for Criminal Justice Reform

UCTV: UC Los Angeles