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From Prison Arts to Creative Futures - by Alma Robinson (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Discover the Transformational Power of Arts Programs in Prisons--and Beyond Alma Robinson, a nationally recognized arts leader, first encountered the powerful effect of the arts on people who are incarcerated when she attended a performance of Twelfth Night presented by Marin Shakespeare Company at San Quentin State Prison (now San Quentin Rehabilitation Center).
- About the Author: Alma Robinson is the Executive Director of California Lawyers for the Arts (CLA), where she oversees legal, education and alternative dispute resolution services, and leads a robust Arts-in-Corrections Initiative.
- 224 Pages
- Art, Business Aspects
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Book Synopsis
Discover the Transformational Power of Arts Programs in Prisons--and Beyond
Alma Robinson, a nationally recognized arts leader, first encountered the powerful effect of the arts on people who are incarcerated when she attended a performance of Twelfth Night presented by Marin Shakespeare Company at San Quentin State Prison (now San Quentin Rehabilitation Center). Inspired by men who were transformed through their work with the acting ensemble, she launched a successful journey to utilize new, evidence-based research to restore funding for arts programs in California prisons that was eventually expanded to other states across the country.
This book describes Robinson's journey from expanding prison arts programs to providing opportunities for people seeking sustainable careers after their release. Readers are invited to imagine how arts can lead the way to a more robust system of rehabilitation for our incarcerated populations that will result in less recidivism and greater public safety.
Review Quotes
"In this remarkable narrative, Alma Robinson outlines a successful journey to expand public funds for arts programs in prisons and jails, building pathways for incarcerated individuals to discover their humanity as they reintegrate into society. She also draws attention to the important role of private philanthropy in seeding demonstration projects and funding sustainable programs."
--Darren Walker, former Ford Foundation president and author of From Generosity to Justice
"At a time in our country and in our world where hope seems far away, this wonderful book from Alma Robinson boldly shows how the powerful combination of creativity and commitment to human dignity can lead to undreamt of opportunities. This is a story worth sharing, one that can ignite the imagination of all who want to make a difference and move our world from the nightmare it often is to the dream that God has for it."
--The Most Rev. Michael B. Curry, XXVII Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church and author of Love Is the Way: Holding onto Hope in Troubling Times
About the Author
Alma Robinson is the Executive Director of California Lawyers for the Arts (CLA), where she oversees legal, education and alternative dispute resolution services, and leads a robust Arts-in-Corrections Initiative. California's stellar arts programs in prisons had been completely defunded in 2003. As a result of CLA's evidence-based demonstration projects, state funding was restored by 2016 to $8 million per year. While working with arts agencies in Texas, Louisiana, and New York to expand arts programs in their prisons and jails, Alma also launched Designing Creative Futures, a program that has placed 175 formerly incarcerated people in paid arts internships. A graduate of Middlebury College and Stanford Law School, she received the Michael Newton Award for collaborative leadership from Americans for the Arts in 2021.