When “normal” is not equitable: justice as the antidote to passive peace By: Eleanor Falahee, ICE in the Heartland team My name is Eleanor Falahee…
Tag: research ethics
Cozine Welch: The Challenges of Reaching Incarcerated Audiences
Cozine Welch, a member of the Documenting Prison Education and the Arts team, is the executive director of A Brighter Way, a reentry support organization.…
Megan Wilson: Change through Collaborative Community Partnerships
My name is Megan Wilson, and I’m a Ph.D. student at Michigan. I am part of the Confronting Conditions of Confinement team, where I have…
Brianna Wells: Investigating the Past and Uncovering Silences in the Archive
My name is Brianna Wells, and I’m a graduating senior at Michigan. I came to Documenting Criminalization and Confinement (DCC) team through my involvement in…
Lupe Cervantes & Nour Eidy: Public Health as Community Advocacy
ICE in the Heartland: Documenting Community Response to Immigration Work Raids at the University of Michigan School of Public Health This is a jointly authored…
Chloe Halprin: Documenting the Destructive Carceral System
My name is Chloe Halprin, and I am a rising junior at the University of Michigan, double majoring in Spanish and Sociology with a minor…
Madeleine Aquilina: Reaching Public and Scholarly Audiences Simultaneously
As a doctoral student in the History of Art department, my research is broadly concerned with 20th century architectural avant-gardes and social housing in Western…
Vanita Seed: Academic Research and the Legacy of Abolitionism
Arguably one of the most famous social justice movements in modern history, the Civil Rights Movement, set out to change the status of African Americans…
Gabrielle French: The Carceral State and Academia: Tensions and Ethics
As a nearly-graduated MSW student, I have had a lifetime of experiences with academia. I have spent semester upon semester researching the different facets of…
Chloe Carlson: Navigating Our Humanities Research Project
In all honesty, I never critically looked at the issues of incarceration and carcerality until I became a student at the University of Michigan. I…