Andrea James is the Founder and Executive Director of the National Council For Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, founder of Families for Justice as Healing, author of Upper Bunkies Unite: And Other Thoughts On the Politics of Mass Incarceration, a 2015 Soros Justice Fellow, and recipient of the 2016 RFK Human Rights award.

Andrea worked within the criminal justice system for more than 25 years, from her days as a youth worker, to her work as a criminal defense attorney. In 2009 she was sentenced to serve a 24-month federal prison sentence. After a lifetime of work seeking justice on behalf of disenfranchised people, she was stunned at what she encountered upon entering the federal prison system as an incarcerated person. Andrea uses her experience to raise awareness of the affect of incarceration of women on themselves, their children and communities, and to raise awareness of the need to shift from a criminal legal system to a system focused on human justice.

What social justice and/or criminal justice reforms do you want the US to make around its drug policy, particularly around cannabis? 

At the National Council For Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, our goal is to end incarceration of women and girls. To do this we need all women to understand their role in this important mission. There are myriad intersectional issues with the movement to shift from a criminal legal system to one based on human justice, and the Puffragette movement. In both there are now millions of directly affected women and together we can change the world.

Social Media:

Facebook: Andrea James
Twitter: @andreacjames
instagram: @andreafreeher