Facing Race: A National Conference in St. Louis, MO — November 20-22, 2024

Bruce Reilly

Deputy Director | VOTE
Bruce Reilly (J.D., Tulane Law) was a jailhouse lawyer, artist, and writer during his 12 years of incarceration. After his release in 2005, while earning minimum wage and nearly homeless, he has since became a core contributor to reform work in two states and nationally. He co-founded Transcending Through Education Foundation, along with two friends who also went from prison to law school; and also co-founded the national coalition Formerly Incarcerated, Convicted People and Families Movement. He serves as VOTE’s Deputy Director.

Presentations from Facing Race 2016

Convictions: A Proxy for Race

VOTE has been a leader on criminal justice policy issues, particularly as the core of their membership comes from a jailhouse lawyer approach to identifying problems, openly challenging injustices, and crafting alternatives. Along with sister organizations also fighting to Ban the Box, we successfully broke new ground with a petition that forced President Obama to issue an executive order in 2015. VOTE has been a national leader in challenging the same rationale for exclusion from public housing, and in 2016 won a new policy in New Orleans that is a starting point for others. Our 2016 legislation and litigation voting rights campaign is being fought in Louisiana: the most incarcerated state in the world, and home to the most violent and storied forms of race-based voter disenfranchisement.

In the 21st century, oppressors need not talk about race because they have convictions to label who is in the "Us" or "Them." Yet these convictions are created through race-based policing in schools and communities, and structural racism throughout the decision-making process of the system. This session is not to tell us what we already know. It is for activists and strategists who want to integrate race and convictions in a way that works- and in a way that does not exclude roughly 50 million white Americans (and their families) who also suffer the impacts of a conviction.

Speakers: Norris Henderson, Bruce Reilly