All
Of Us Or None
All of Us Or None is a national organizing initiative of
prisoners, former prisoners and felons, to combat the many forms
of discrimination that we face as the result of felony
convictions. After serving time in torturous conditions, we were
met at the gate with prejudice and discrimination that made our
re-entry into society difficult and in some cases impossible.
Many of us recognize that our prison sentence never ends as long
as the discrimination against us continues.
California Coalition for Women Prisoners
CCWP is a grassroots racial justice organization that challenges
the institutional violence imposed on women and communities of
color by prisons and the criminal justice system. We are
building a movement with women prisoners, family members of
prisoners, and the larger communities through organizing,
leadership development, and political education.
California Families United for Prison Reform
Families United for Prison Reform is a California public benefit
nonprofit corporation. We are currently sponsoring two
initiatives for the 2008 General Presidential Election in
California. These initiatives have received their official Title
and Summary from the Attorney General on September 27. We have
until February 25, 2008 to collect a minimum of 433,971
signatures to qualify for the ballot.
California Prison Focus
The mission for which California Prison Focus is organized is to
end human rights abuses and torture in California prisons
including abolishing the Security Housing Units, to end medical
neglect and to insure civil and human rights for all prisoners.
CPF achieves its purposes by visiting prisoners, monitoring
conditions, educating the public and policymakers, providing a
voice for and working with prisoners, and encouraging legal
advocacy.
California Prison Moratorium Project
The California Prison Moratorium Project seeks to stop all
public and private prison construction in California.
The money saved from California's prison construction budget
should be used to fund and actively pursue alternatives to
imprisonment for as many people as possible. As a result,
communities will have the power to examine the reasons people
break the law, and seek alternatives to prison.
Most people who are being put in prison do not need to be
removed from society and could effectively be diverted into
community-based programs. Since the majority of people are being
sent to prison for non-violent drug-related or economic crimes,
we believe these people should have access to drug treatment
and/or economic assistance (such as education, affordable
childcare, job training and placement, or welfare) instead of
prison terms. Even the diminishing percentage of people
convicted of violent offenses can be helped outside the prison
system, through programs that address aggressive behavior and
abusive relationships, and drug and alcohol treatment.
Centerforce - Service, Education, Advocacy
Centerforce works with prisoners and their families, providing
advocacy and support: family reunification, parenting, health
education, HIV prevention
Ella
Baker Center : Books Not Bars
Books Not Bars is a statewide campaign aiming to shut down
California’s abusive and costly youth prisons and replace them
with alternatives that work – like regional rehabilitation
centers and community-based programs.
Families to Amend California's Three Strikes
Organization dedicated to ending the Three Strikes = 25 to Life
sentencing in the State of California.
Justice Now!
Our mission is to end violence against women and stop their
imprisonment. We believe that prisons and policing are not
making our communities safe and whole but that, in fact, the
current system severely damages the people it imprisons and the
communities most affected by it. We promote alternatives to
policing and prisons and challenge the prison industrial complex
in all its forms.
Kern
Valley State Prison Network
This website is made by and for family and friends with a loved
one inside Kern Valley State Prison
Prisoner Action Coalition
Students in PAC advocate to improve conditions in California's
prisons and assist individual prisoners with legal matters.
Sacramento region prison family organization
Organization dedicated to assisting families affected by
incarceration by providing many avenues of support. Will be
opening a hospitality house in the near future. Also working to
develop programs and classes to help our families.
San
Francisco Children of Incarcerated Parents
Two point four million American children have a parent behind
bars today. Seven million, or one in ten of the nation’s
children, have a parent under criminal justice supervision—in
jail or prison, on probation, or on parole.
Little is known about what becomes of children when their
parents are incarcerated. There is no requirement that the
various institutions charged with dealing with those accused of
breaking the law—police, courts, jails and prisons, probation
departments—inquire about children’s existence, much less
concern themselves with children’s care. Conversely, there is no
requirement that systems serving children—schools, child
welfare, juvenile justice—address parental incarceration.
Children of prisoners have a daunting array of needs. They need
a safe place to live and people to care for them in their
parents’ absence, as well as everything else a parent might be
expected to provide: food, clothing, medical care.
But beyond these material requirements, young people themselves
identify less tangible, but equally compelling, needs. They need
to be told the truth about their parents’ situation. They need
someone to listen without judging, so that their parents’ status
need not remain a secret. They need the companionship of others
who share their experience, so they can know they are not alone.
They need contact with their parents—to have that relationship
recognized and valued even under adverse circumstances.
And—rather than being stigmatized for their parents’ actions or
status—they need to be treated with respect, offered
opportunity, and recognized as having potential.
The
Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
Offers model programs, public education, and policy research
around alternatives to incarceration, sentencing and reentry
issues, drug policy reform, and social justice issues.
TiPS
- Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety
"TiPS: Building Partnerships, Reforming Corrections, Improving
Public Safety." TiPS is a union of victims of violent crime,
offenders, and their advocates partnering together to restore
common sense to public safety.
Valley State Prison - Inmate Family Council
VSPW Inmate Family Council. IFC at Valley State Prison for Women
provides information about visiting, quarterly packages, and
mail pertaining to a family member or loved one incarcerated at
this California State Prison (CDC) in Chowchilla, California