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In what the San Francisco Chronicle called an epic work of investigative journalism that lays bare our nation’s brutal and counterproductive juvenile prisons and is a clarion call to bring our children home, Nell Bernstein eloquently argues that there is no good way to lock up a child. Making the radical argument that state-run detention centers should be abolished completely, her passionate and convincing (Kirkus) book points out that our system of juvenile justice flies in the face of everything we know about what motivates young people to change.
Called a devastating read by Truthout, Burning Down the House received a starred Publishers Weekly review and was an In These Times recommended summer read. Bernstein’s heartrending portraits of young people abused by the system intended to protect and rehabilitate them are interwoven with reporting on innovative programs that provide effective alternatives to putting children behind bars.
The result is a work that the Philadelphia Inquirer called a searing indictment and a deft strike at the heart of America’s centuries-old practice of locking children away in institution -a landmark book that has already launched a new national conversation.
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In what the San Francisco Chronicle called an epic work of investigative journalism that lays bare our nation’s brutal and counterproductive juvenile prisons and is a clarion call to bring our children home, Nell Bernstein eloquently argues that there is no good way to lock up a child. Making the radical argument that state-run detention centers should be abolished completely, her passionate and convincing (Kirkus) book points out that our system of juvenile justice flies in the face of everything we know about what motivates young people to change.
Called a devastating read by Truthout, Burning Down the House received a starred Publishers Weekly review and was an In These Times recommended summer read. Bernstein’s heartrending portraits of young people abused by the system intended to protect and rehabilitate them are interwoven with reporting on innovative programs that provide effective alternatives to putting children behind bars.
The result is a work that the Philadelphia Inquirer called a searing indictment and a deft strike at the heart of America’s centuries-old practice of locking children away in institution -a landmark book that has already launched a new national conversation.