ABOUT
JSA/ JSA
Social
Activist Award JSA AWARDS: Recipients of Social Activists Award and Site of Conference 2009—Social Activist Awardees 2006—Pat Humphries and Sandy Opatow (Emma’s Revolution)—University of California, Berkeley 2005 — Hattie “Mamma Hattie” Harris (Vine-Albany Task Force) and Chris Ducot—University of Hartford 2004—Esther Heffernan (Edgewood College)—Edgewood College, Madison, Wisconsin 2003—Pat Beetle (Upper Hudson Peace Action), Donna DeMaria (Homeless Action Committee), and Alice Green (Center for Law and Justice)—Best Western Inn, Albany, New York
Lori Pompa is on the faculty of the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University, though she’s more likely to be known as a faculty member, Founder and Director of the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program. Established in 1997, Inside-Out creates opportunities for dialogue between those outside and those inside of our nation’s correctional facilities. The program brings “outside” students into correctional facilities to take classes with their “inside” student counterparts – incarcerated men and women who are enrolled in the same class. “The idea,” Pompa says, “is to turn how people think of things inside out, to bring some of the voices on the inside out.” She continues: “Part of the program is demythologizing who’s inside prison.” As part of this demythologizing process, Pompa has brought in excess of 10,000 students into state prisons and county jails since the program’s inception. She has also trained over100 hundred professors across 90 colleges and 33 states to participate in Inside-Out. The result: not only do students learn from each other about such topics as Dostoevsky and economics, they also learn from each other in a way that cannot be created in a formal university setting. The Justice Studies Association is pleased to offer this year’s Social Activist Award to Lori Pompa, for her dedication to the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program truly embodies the theme of this year’s conference: Unlocking the Prisons of Our Lives.
2009 Award winners:
Pat and Sandy stand tall among the most renowned songsters of peace and justice in North America, indeed around the globe. They travel the world inspiring action to social justice at the most basic levels of community. fRoots Magazine has described them as "An acoustic, insightful delight in the tradition of Seeger and Guthrie." The song “If I Give Your Name,” by Sandy and Pat was a Grand Prize Winner (one of 24,000 entries) in the Folk Category of the prestigious John Lennon Songwriting Contest (http://www.jlsc.com). The song sheds light on the silent suffering of family members of undocumented workers lost on 9/11 in the World Trade Center. They sing as well about human rights, the environment, the well-being of women, and the needs of a global community. For more information on their numerous accolades, catalog of CD’s, and bookings look at www.emmasrevolution.com/ they are magicians of the spirit without ever turning a slight of hand or word.
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