Thanks for your interest in the Fall 2022 pilot of Fundamentals of Pretrial Justice!
This six-week course runs from November 1 to December 20, with live sessions every Tuesday from 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. ET. (No class Thanksgiving week.)
Special Pilot Pricing
The tuition for this course is regularly $1,000. In appreciation for your feedback, we are significantly reducing the cost for all students participating in the Fall 2022 pilot. (Don't miss out; this discount won't be available in 2023!)
See your special rate below:
*Please Note: Only community members need to enter a promo code at checkout. (We've already discounted the tuition for all other stakeholders in our system.)
GOVERNMENT + PRIVATE SECTOR (anyone working for a gov't agency or in the private sector) Pay just $500 (50% savings) *NO CODE NEEDEDat checkout
NONPROFIT SECTOR (anyone working for a nonprofit organization) Pay just $500 (50% savings) *NO CODE NEEDEDat checkout
COMMUNITY MEMBERS (community advocates, students and others not employed in the categories above) Pay just $250 (75% savings) *Use promo code "COMMUNITY" at checkout
If the cost of this course is a barrier, please reach out to us via the email address below.
Questions? Email us at funfaculty@pretrial.org.
We look forward to seeing you in class!
Wendy Blackwell Fortune
Senior Associate
Pretrial Justice Institute
Wendy Blackwell Fortune has joined PJI as a Senior Associate, where she will lead PJI’s portfolio of interactive learning events. Prior to joining PJI, Wendy was the Director of the Practitioner’s Leadership Institute at the Center for Urban Families (CFUF), where she developed capacity-building relationships and collaborations with individuals and community. Previously, Wendy served as the Executive Director of the National Children’s Museum, where she began as the Director of Education. During her decade of service, she grew the education and programs departments, developed education initiatives, and shaped the Center for Learning and Innovation. Wendy championed community collaborations that produced replication-model child and caregiver learning together programs.
Wendy enjoys the intersection of family, literacy, and art and shared her passion at CFUF with the Family Reading Circle and other two-generation efforts. Wendy’s museum-school collaboration won a Promising Practice recognition from the Association of Children’s Museum for her work at Port Discovery Children’s Museum. She and her staff were honored with the Judith P. Hoyer Award for Outstanding Service to Children by the Prince Georges County Early Childhood Interagency. She is also an award-winning teacher. Wendy and her eighth grade students received the Daily Point of Light of the Nation from President George H. Bush at the U.S. White House.
Wendy is a mother of two who enjoys being a textile artist and leading programs with children in her spare time. She is a 2016 BaltimoreCorp Elevation Award winner for her ART POWER project where she offers art activities to children ages 5-12 in West Baltimore.
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John Clark
Senior Consultant
Pretrial Justice Institute
John Clark is a Senior Consultant for Technical Assistance at the Pretrial Justice Institute (PJI). In over thirty years at PJI, John has provided technical assistance to thousands of entities around the country on implementing evidence-based pretrial justice practices. He has authored numerous articles relating to pretrial justice in such publications as: the American Bar Association’s The Improvement of the Administration of Justice series; The Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice; the Journal of Court Innovation; and Judicature. He began his career in the pretrial justice field in the 1970s as a pretrial services officer in the District of Columbia. He has a master’s degree in the administration of justice from American University. He is the recipient of the Ennis J. Olgiati Award from the National Association of Pretrial Services Agencies for lifetime commitment to pretrial justice.
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Shavonte Keaton, Esq.
Senior Associate
Pretrial Justice Institute
Shavonte is a Senior Associate at PJI, where she develops and implements the organization’s change work and curriculum. As a former foster youth and child of a formerly incarcerated parent, Shavonte has spent over a decade of her career using her legal expertise and life experiences to support her work in advancing systemic solutions to the distinct challenges and barriers that system-involved youth and families face. Her background includes working as a case manager for homeless youth and families as well as many years serving as a peer and professional advocate for current and former foster youth. Prior to coming to PJI, she served as the Georgia Assistant State Coordinator for the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative (JDAI). She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from San Francisco State University and a Juris Doctor degree from Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco.
Enter code to continue.
The code to access Sessions One through Six will be provided during the Orientation Web Meeting on November 1 at 3 p.m. ET. If you are unable to attend the orientation, please email us at funfaculty@pretrial.org.
Detaining the Poor: How money bail perpetuates an endless cycle of poverty and jail time - Prison Policy Institute 2016
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
This 2016 repoft from the Prison Policy Institue finds that people in local jails are significantly poorer than non-incarcerated people, and even poorer than people in prison. Detaining the Poor: How money bail perpetuates an endless cycle of poverty and jail time connects the large pretrial population in local jails to the criminal justice system’s reliance on money bail.
From Bondage to Bail Bonds: Putting a Price on Freedom in New Orleans - The Data Center 2018
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
From Bondage to Bail Bonds: Putting a Price on Freedom in New Orleans, co-written by the Vera Institute, the Data Center and Foundation for Louisiana, asks what can be learned from the past to inform alternatives to money bail now and in the future.
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Select the "View On-Demand Recording" button to begin.
This research summary reports results from an analysis of the effects of misdemeanor bail reform, focusing on a natural experiment in Harris County, Texas that abruptly increased pretrial release rates.
Open to download resource.
The International Association of Chiefs of Police studied how police departments approach the use of citation in lieu of arrest, with a goal to provide the law enforcement community and other criminal justice stakeholders with a reference point for information about citation practices across the United States.
Pre-Arrest Diversion: Pathways to Community, Police, Treatment and Community Collaborative - PTACC 2017
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
A graphic from the Police, Treatment and Community Collaboraive (PTACC) showing pathways to community through self-referral, active outreach, Naxolone Plus, officer prevention and officer intervention.
Early Appointment of Counsel - 6th Amendment Center & PJI 2014
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
The “Sixth Amendment guarantees a defendant the right to have counsel present at all ‘critical’ stages of the criminal proceedings,” including those that occur before trial. What remains an open question is the precise moment in a criminal prosecution when counsel must be appointed to an indigent defendant in order to fulfill the promise of the Sixth Amendment. This paper suggests that the justice goals of the criminal court systems will be best served where every indigent defendant has appointed counsel from the earliest moment that the indigent defense system learns the defendant is being investigated, has received a summons to appear, is arrested, or has a charging document filed against him.
Video: What's Next, SF? LEADing the Way to Treatment and Recovery
Select the "View On-Demand Recording" button to begin.
Select the "View On-Demand Recording" button to begin.
This episode of What's Next, SF? Explores LEAD SF, a state-granted pilot program administered by the SF Department of Public Health. LEAD SF is an innovative pre-booking diversion program that refers repeat, low-level non-violent drug offenders at high risk of recidivism, at the earliest contact with law enforcement to community-based health and social services as an alternative to jail and prosecution.
The Myth of Legal Leverage: Toward a Relational Framework for Court-Based Treatment - Center for Court Innovation 2020
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
The challenge for practitioners is to reorient their approaches and—to some extent—their models, embracing the idea that less is often more and that positive interactions, rather than length of intervention, may be the key variable in the crime-reduction calculus. At the same time, researchers should continue to suss out the mechanisms for effective short-term intervention and how, for example, a small dose of supervised treatment might be an effective conduit to a longer course of entirely voluntary treatment.
Open to download resource.
The concept of procedural justice invokes the idea that treating people in a fair, humanizing and respectful manner is not only the right thing to do, but can improve the effectiveness and transparency of an organization. This case study defines procedural justice, asserts its importance as a component of fair, legitimate, and transparent pretrial justice systems, and identifies opportunities for pretrial system improvement.
“Model” Bail Laws: Re-Drawing the Line Between Pretrial Release and Detention - CLEBP 2017
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Just read pages 31-44 on the pretrial release and detention decisions.
This paper, written by Tim Schnacke, is designed to help persons craft and justify language articulating who should be released and who should be eligible for detention in a purposeful in-or-out pretrial system through a study of the history of bail, the fundamental legal principles, the pretrial research, and the national standards on pretrial release and detention.
The Use of Pretrial "Risk Assessment" Instruments: A Shared Statement of Civil Rights Concerns - Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights 2018
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
A broad coalition of more than 100 civil rights, digital justice, and community-based organizations released a shared statement of civil rights concerns highlighting concerns with the adoption of algorithmic-based decisionmaking tools (also known as risk assessment instruments) as a substitution for ending money bail.
After Cash Bail: A Framework for Reimagining Pretrial Justice - The Bail Project 2020
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Most Americans recognize that our current pretrial system must change. But while there is growing consensus that we need reform, a shared vision for what this looks like is less clear. Without a focus on the larger systemic problems of which bail is a symptom—structural racism and mass incarceration—reform runs the risk of re-creating the harms and disparities of the current system even after ending cash bail.
To effect true change, two priorities must inform the transition to a fair justice system: first, eliminating pretrial detention except where absolutely necessary to prevent imminent violence or willful flight; and second, combatting the racial bias that pervades every corner of the American legal system and reinforces inequality. Overall success in this effort should be measured by the level of decarceration and reduction of disparities in how criminal justice is applied, not just the abolition of cash bail.
Using Behavioral Science to Improve Criminal Justice Outcomes - University of Chicago and ideas 42 2018
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
The NYC Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice—in partnership with the New York City Police Department and New York State Unified Court System Office of Court Administration—asked ideas42 and the University of Chicago Crime Lab to design and implement inexpensive, scalable solutions to reduce the failure to appear (FTA) rate.
Vision for Justice 2020 and Beyond: A New Paradigm for Public Safety - The Leadership Conference and Civil Rights Corps 2019
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Just read the Introduction, pages 2-6, and Plank 2, pages 15-18.
Vision for Justice 2020 and Beyond, authored by The Leadershp Conference and the Civil Rights Corps, has been endorsed by 117 civil and human rights and social justice organizations — a number worth noting because of the breadth of reach it represents. The groups shared Vision for Justice 2020 and Beyond with 2020 presidential candidates to offer critical policy guidance for drafting robust criminal justice reform agendas. It presents 14 planks addressing reforms like amending the pretrial process, public defense, prosecution, policing, and the criminalization of poverty.