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Flora Birdzell
Roth Herrlinger
Emily Williams
Julio Marcial (he/his)
Senior Vice President, Programs
Lisa Small (she/her) Director, Youth & Transformative Justice
Sarah Vail
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⢠Youth arrest rates decreased by 75%
⢠10 youth prisons closed
⢠Youth incarceration rates decreased by 60%
⢠Reinvested over $300 million in government funding from punitive measures to youth development initiatives
How was this possible?
⢠Weāve hit a wall, efforts stagnated, elected officials not feeling the urgency, Probation et al are gumming up the works
⢠Sexual abuse allegations against Probation represent an enormous opportunity to further delegitimize both juvenile probation and child welfare
⢠Opportunity to mobilize, organize and politicize the 1000ās that are filing claims + the 1000ās in the community who are survivors across 3 generations
⢠Push for change that goes beyond a class of claimants and beyond recompense for past harms; indict and take down the entire system
⢠Despite strides, the quest remains: eradicating the incarceration of girls and gender expansive youth.
⢠A gender based approach, led by survivors, can be a key driver for a larger movement for change.
⢠A one size fits all approach doesnāt work
āWe donāt do systems change for only one population.ā
The Liberation Fund centers a movement building vision to create a blueprint by 10 community organizations, setting the course for a deep investment in alternatives and healing for GGE young people.
Pooled grants and contributions from funders and individual donors
Provides infrastructure funding & general operating support grants
Facilitates peer to peer learning, collaboration, relationship building & healing
Leverages inside/outside strategies
āThese organizations who are hereāIāve encountered so many of these and they are powerhouses, but we have never had a chance to really work together or talk to each other before now, so bringing us together this way is really exciting."āLiberation Fund Partner
Organizing Roots
Jessica Nowlan
Reimagine Freedom
Dani Kim
Organizing Roots
Tia Elena Martinez has over 25 yearsā experience working for social justice in working class communities of color in the United States. Over the decades her work spanned a wide range of issues including mass incarceration, the school to prison pipeline, K 12 education, the HIV epidemic, the war on drugs, homelessness, affordable housing, disconnected youth, and immigration. She is currently the Managing Director of Organizing Roots, an organization that seeks to advance racial, gender, economic, and health justice by providing grassroots organizing groups with a potent combination of capacity building and coaching on conscious organizing and movement building, strategy development, and data.
Jessica is the previous executive director of Young Womenās Freedom Center - YWFC, where she supported the organization's growth from 5 to 45 staff members and 1 to 5 locations and increased the annual budget by over 1700%. During her tenure at YWFC, Jessica also drafted and launched a Freedom Charter with a base of over 400 formerly incarcerated women, young women, and trans people of all genders. She is driven in her work by her experiences navigating the juvenile justice system as a young person and poverty, houselessness, and intimate partner violence as a single mother.
As the president of Reimagine Freedom, Jessica is nurturing the vision of the Freedom Charter, and mobilizing the resources and power to ensure this movement is successful and sustainable.
Dani Kim is a social movement organizer with over 25 years' experience. They have organized in schools and neighborhoods, on college campuses and on the buses of Los Angeles to build the power of workingclass communities of color to transform society. Dani has nearly a decade of director and executive level leadership and is a skilled facilitator, trainer, public speaker and writer. They have a background as a professional scholar and educator, which includes teaching at the University of Colorado, Boulder, the University of Denver and Georgetown University. They also served as a school district administrator in Denver Public Schools. They are currently CoManaging Director of Organizing Roots, which seeks to advance racial, gender, economic, and health justice by providing grassroots organizing groups with a potent combination of capacity building and coaching on conscious organizing and movement building, strategy development, and data.
Not just another report Focus on Girls and GenderExpansive Youth
Addressing root causes
Not waiting on Law Enforcement
Estimated number of girls and gender expansive touched by the criminal punishment system in Los Angeles County in 2023.
4 in Secure Youth Treatment Facility
17 in Camp 23 in Juvenile Hall
114 in Private Out of Home Placement
317 Home on Probation
(Wardship, Non wardship, and Informal)
690 Referred to Probation
882 Arrested
Source: Numbers for SYTF, Camp, and Juvenile Hall from November 6. 2023 Memo to LA BOS from County of Los Angeles Probation Department; Arrest numbers are from 2022 posted on Open Justice by CA DOJ; All other numbers rely on 2018 from CA DOJ (last time county data was released) reduced by the percent drop in statewide figures between 2018 and 2022.
475* girls and gender expansive youth are incarcerated, in inadequate placements, or home on probation
*comprised of youth in probation camps, halls and SYTF, out of-home placements, and home on probation
Hope turns 18 and enters the adult system
GENERATIONS
Racism
Poverty
Gender Violence (Historic, Systemic, Structural)
MOTHERS
Housing and Economic Instability
Family Separation
GGE YOUTH
Hope becomes a parent
Abuse in Foster Care
Criminalize
Hopeās Survival Strategies
Criminalize and Demonize
Parents and Guardians
School Pushout
Hope is arrested
Detention / Incarceration
Root Causes System Response System Trap Programming Gap
Harmful āout of homeā Congregate Placement and Supervision
Run Away / Violate Conditions
Bench Warrant / Reoffend
Deeper Involvement in the Street Economy
The state has failed in its duty to protect 3,800 Children
āExperts say the volume is unlike anything theyāve heard of in local government.ā
āLos Angeles Times, 4/8/23
āThe thing thatās so disturbing from our perspective is they throw this out as a line item in some budget document and, if itās true, it would be the most massive sex abuse scandal imaginable.ā
āAttorney Stewart Mollrich, with a firm representing some of the claims in Los Angeles Times, 5/1/23
āWe need to stop incarcerating these youth. These facilities are causing harmā¦Please consider us as you would your own children; you wouldn't wish for them to be subjected to these facilities.ā
Root Causes System Response
MOTHERS GENERATIONS
Close alignment with groups working to keep her in school and out of group care through CPS
GGE YOUTH
Racism
Poverty Gender Violence (Historic, Systemic, Structural)
Housing and Economic Instability
Family Separation
Abuse in Foster Care
Criminalize Hopeās Survival Strategies
School Pushout
Hope turns 18 and enters the adult system
Hope and her family break the cycle. Self determination is restored to three generations: Grandma, Hope and her siblings, and the grand babies
Break the System Trap and fill the Program gap with GGE-Specific Interventions + Power Building
Criminalize Parents and Guardians
Resourcing young people so they donāt need to return to the street economy and families so they donāt need to give up thier children
Close the front door
Hope is arrested
ā¦makelongpromised diversion,areality
Hope becomes a parent X X X X
Hope and her guardians go to gender specific YES teams and community led restorative & transformative justice processesā¦
ā¦never gets placed in juvenile hall, a camp, or congregate careā¦
Detention / Incarceration
Building the alternative to Probation
Expanded alternatives to incarceration for
GGE Youth
Harmful āout of homeā Congregate Placement and Supervision
ā¦and free up the money needed to support and grow this alternative system of healing, love, and home care.
Run Away / Violate Conditions
Bench Warrant / Reoffend
Close the back door
Credible messengers and YES teams provide circles of support and healing ⦠and address structural drivers āincome, jobs, and housing
Deeper Involvement in the Street Economy
Advocacy and organizing partners work to put an end to bench warrants for probation violationsā¦
ā¦has the root causes of her challenges addressed comprehensivelyā¦
Abigail Richards (she/her)
Co Executive Director
Young Womenās Freedom Center
Youth & Community
Power Building
Systems Change
Advocacy
Capacity Building Programs & Service
Delivery
GGE youth face multiple forms of injustice and inequity. To solve these pressing problems, we are working together to build the world these young people deserve.
⢠Family & family like housing
⢠Safe & inclusive schools
⢠Jobs
⢠Mentors & case managers
⢠LGBTQI+ advocates & service providers
⢠Family reunification specialists
⢠Organizers & power builders
⢠Immigration advocates
⢠Reproductive justice practitioners
⢠Legal aid and advocates
⢠Data and evaluation experts
⢠Arts/healing/wellness facilitators
⢠Field building, activating the ecosystem
⢠Strengthening the organizational capacity for survivors
⢠Facilitators team
⢠Convenings and trust building
⢠Narrative infrastructure
⢠Youth leadership development
⢠Planning and Implementation support
⢠Sustainability
⢠Program Replication, State and National Impact
$3 million (2024)
⢠Implementation grants
⢠Continued facilitation
⢠Healing & renewal spaces
$5 million (2025 2027)
⢠Multi year campaign grants & service provision
$10 million (2028 2030)
⢠Sustainability & Implementation of national models
As a funder and donor collaborative, the Liberation Fund offers funders and donors:
⢠Deep knowledge and insight about girl/women/GE led movement strategy and tactics
⢠Relationships with expert staff who are connected to local movement organizations in Los Angeles County and California
⢠Knowledge exchange with allied funders and donors
⢠Giving that is aligned with the movementās needs
⢠Capacity building for individual groups and the Liberation Fund ecosystem
⢠Deepening existing social justice commitments to include and center gender justice through trust and relationship building.
Liberation Fund Networking Reception (May 2024)
Blueprint Release (June 2024)
Participatory Grantmaking Process (July 2024)
Implementation Grants (September 2024)
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