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JIE Partners

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Founding Partners

The Heyman Center for the Humanities

The Heyman Center for the Humanities provides the intellectual and physical space for interdisciplinary discussions among members of the Columbia community and the New York City public. It brings together faculty and students from across the university—from the humanities, social and natural sciences, law, medicine, journalism, and the arts—to share thinking, debate ideas, and collectively consider methodological, conceptual, and ethical issues of common interest and concern. It sponsors public lectures, readings, conferences, and performances, fosters scholarly and artistic collaborations, and offers meeting spaces for its various affiliated members. Its Public Humanities programs serve people in neighboring communities who have limited access to, or who might uniquely benefit from, focused humanities programming—including incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals, veterans, and those who are economically disadvantaged.

http://heymancenter.org

The Center for Justice

The Center for Justice at Columbia University is committed to reducing the nation’s reliance on incarceration and advancing alternative approaches to safety and justice through education, research and policy. Its mission is to help transform a criminal justice system from one that is driven by punishment and retribution to one that is centered on prevention and healing. The Center is interdisciplinary and built around community collaboration. It works in partnership with schools, departments, centers and institutes across Columbia, other universities, government agencies, community organizations, advocates and those directly affected by the criminal justice system.

http://centerforjustice.columbia.edu

University Partners

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

College-in-Prison Program Partners

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu

The Cornell Prison Education Program provides a liberal arts curriculum leading to an Associate of Arts degree for men incarcerated at the Auburn and Cayuga Correctional Facilities. Cornell faculty and doctoral students serve as instructors for all courses, and a community college accredits the degree conferred upon eligible prisoners. The program offers nearly a dozen courses each semester in economics, constitutional law and individual rights, creative writing, genetics, medical anthropology, international human rights, writing, math, and Asian meditation.

http://cpep.cornell.edu