Prison justice

This archive tracks meaningful progress in prison justice — from sentencing reforms and decarceration efforts to programs that support incarcerated people and returning citizens. Across 86 articles, these stories document what’s working, who’s driving change, and how communities are pushing the system toward greater fairness and humanity.

Prison cell, for article on federal private prisons

U.S. Justice Department announces plan to end federal private prisons

Private prisons faced a rare federal reversal in the summer of 2016, when Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates ordered the Justice Department to phase out its contracts with private operators. The directive followed an Inspector General report finding higher rates of assaults and contraband in private facilities. It stood for six months before being rescinded — but the formal record remained.

National flag of Lesotho, for article on same-sex decriminalization Lesotho

Lesotho decriminalizes same-sex relations in milestone for LGBTQ rights in Africa

Lesotho decriminalized male same-sex activity in 2012, lifting a colonial-era common law offense that had long shadowed gay and bisexual men in the small southern African kingdom. A year later, Maseru held its first pride march, with police escorting hundreds through the streets. The reform echoed Basotho traditions of same-sex partnership that predated colonial rule.

Hand holding on to chain link fence, for article on Norwegian prison reform

Norway’s prison reform movement launches, aiming to replace punishment with rehabilitation

Norwegian prison reform began in 1968, when a group of activists, lawyers, and formerly incarcerated people founded KROM to challenge a system where recidivism hovered around 60 to 70 percent. Early wins came slowly — forced labor ended in 1970, juvenile centers closed in 1975 — but the reframing they started reshaped how a country could think about justice.