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Press Release 09/26/2019 Sujatha Baliga, an attorney in Oakland, California is one of the
lucky recipients of the five-year $625,000 award that comes with no
strings attached. Baliga is a restorative justice practitioner
and director of the Restorative Justice Project that she initiated in
Alameda, California. Her work attempts to demonstrate that
survivor-centered restorative justice alternatives are more effective
rather than the traditional legal interventions as a means of helping
crime survivors to heal. “Restorative justice inspires me because I get to see families and
communities achieve safety, accountability, and healing through
dialogue,†says Baliga who suffered sexual abuse from a family member as
a child. “It helps me create what I needed when I was a child,†she
says. Baliga also develops and facilitates restorative justice
responses to address needs of survivors of intimate partner and sexual
violence. “As a survivor of child sexual abuse, she powerfully
articulates how punitive systems of criminal justice often fail to offer
sufficient familial support and pathways to healing for survivors and
frequently have silencing and shaming effects that prolong their
suffering,†MacArthur says. That is what Baliga says. “As a child
sexual abuse survivor growing up in an immigrant family, I was more
afraid of ‘help’ than I was of my father. I didn’t want to be placed in
foster care or for my father to be locked up, and I worried that telling
the truth might trigger immigration consequences for my family.†Baliga
goes on to say, “As an adult, I became a victim advocate, and then a
public defender, but I was never satisfied with legal outcomes that
framed success as beating the other ‘side.’ Ultimately, I was drawn to
restorative justice because it works best without involving the criminal
legal system or other systems of separation and oppression.†The
Indian-American attorney’s team provides training and technical
assistance to similar programs in multiple counties and states that
operate in collaboration with community-based organizations and partners
from the criminal and juvenile legal systems. They also collect and
evaluate data on rates of recidivism reduction and crime survivor
satisfaction from each site to further improve existing programs. According
to MacArthur Foundation, Baliga’s efforts to reduce the juvenile legal
system’s reliance on incarceration “hold promise for diminishing its
highly disproportionate and detrimental effects on communities of
color,†and goes further to note that, “Baliga is increasing the
availability of restorative justice alternatives for young people in
cities across the United States.†A 1993 graduate from Harvard
University, Baliga has a JD (1999) from the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. Since 2015, she has served as director of the Restorative
Justice Project at Impact Justice, where she is also a Just Beginnings
Collaborative Fellow. She is a co-founder of Crime Survivors for Safety
and Justice, was a Soros Justice Fellow at Restorative Justice for
Oakland Youth (2008), and has worked previously as a public defender and
victim advocate in New Mexico and New York. You may also access this article through our web-site http://www.lokvani.com/ |
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