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UID:Indybay-18886253
SEQUENCE:19063691
CREATED:20260517T185000Z
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a conversation between Aminah Elster, Jennifer James, and 
 Carlos Martinez on the intersection of prison abolition and healthcare. In 
 2025 Martinez co-edited All This Safety Is Killing Us: Health Justice 
 Beyond Prisons, Police, and Borders to which Elster and James contributed 
 the chapter “Medical Neglect as Carceral Violence.”\n\nAminah Elster is 
 a Black feminist abolitionist, advocate, and researcher whose work 
 transforms systems by centering the leadership and expertise of directly 
 impacted people. She is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of 
 Unapologetically HERS (UAHERS), an organization led by formerly 
 incarcerated women advancing healing, justice, and leadership through 
 participatory research and professional development. Under her leadership, 
 UAHERS launched the Participatory Action Research Leadership Program 
 (PARLP)—a fellowship equipping people incarcerated in California 
 women’s prisons with the tools to conduct research that informs advocacy, 
 policy, and systems change.\n\nAminah’s abolitionist practice is also 
 reflected in her long-standing work with the California Coalition for Women 
 Prisoners (CCWP), where she serves as the Leadership & Resentencing 
 Coordinator and has contributed to policy advocacy, participatory research, 
 and the organization’s inside/outside organizing of those incarcerated in 
 CA women’s prisons. Her work with CCWP has shaped campaigns advancing 
 resentencing, challenging gender-based state violence, and uplifting 
 peer-led leadership inside and outside prison walls.\n\nShe is also the CEO 
 and principal of Proximate Strategies Consulting (PSC), a 
 community-centered strategy and research firm that partners with public 
 systems, foundations, and organizations to co-design equitable solutions 
 and build cultures of belonging. PSC’s Fellowship portfolio increases the 
 reach of peer-led interventions and helps systems access the expertise of 
 people most affected by their policies—advancing this work through 
 participatory action research, professional development, and applied 
 research.\n\nA certified paralegal and ICF Certified Professional Coach, 
 Aminah is a contributing author to All This Safety Is Killing Us, where her 
 chapter, “Medical Neglect as Carceral Violence,” exposes the violent 
 realities of healthcare behind bars. She also co-authored the policy brief 
 Criminal Record Stigma in the College-Educated Labor Market, which examines 
 how record-based discrimination constrains opportunity even among 
 credentialed job seekers. Aminah received her undergraduate degree from UC 
 Berkeley.\n\nJennifer James is an Associate Professor and the Nursing 
 Alumni and Mary Harms Endowed Chair in the Institute for Health and Aging 
 and the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of 
 California San Francisco, where she also directs the sociology PhD program. 
 Jen is a sociologist and Black Feminist scholar who conducts 
 community-engaged qualitative research on racism and health. \n\nHer 
 current work is focused on patient-provider relationships and shared 
 decision-making in carceral settings. Across several research projects, her 
 work centers the voices and experiences of people incarcerated in prisons 
 and jails to better understand women’s health and aging behind bars. Her 
 work has been published in social science, bioethics, and health sciences 
 journals, as well as in numerous edited volumes and in publications 
 distributed inside prisons. Dr. James holds a PhD in Sociology from UCSF, a 
 Master’s of Social Work and a Master’s of Science in Social Policy from 
 the University of Pennsylvania and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science 
 from Yale University.\n\nCarlos Martinez, MPH, PhD is an Assistant 
 Professor in the Department of Latin American and Latino Studies and core 
 faculty member of the Global and Community Health program at the University 
 of California, Santa Cruz. Trained in public health and medical 
 anthropology, Dr. Martinez’s research examines the health and 
 sociocultural implications of policing, incarceration, and punitive 
 immigration and drug policies. He is the co-editor of All This Safety Is 
 Killing Us: Health Justice Beyond Prisons, Police, and Borders (North 
 Atlantic Books, 2025).\n\nThis event is organized in conjunction with the 
 exhibition Everything is Going Right and as part of Visualizing Abolition, 
 an arts-based initiative that reaches across prison borders to contribute 
 to the unfolding collective story and alternative imagining underway to 
 create a future free of prisons.\n\nFree\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/05/17/18886253.php
SUMMARY:In Conversation: All This Safety is Killing Us
LOCATION:Institute of the Arts and Sciences, 100 Panetta Avenue, Santa Cruz
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/05/17/18886253.php
DTSTART:20260523T210000Z
DTEND:20260523T223000Z
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