In Our Future, We Are Free: An Astonishing Story of Resistance and Change
By (Author) Nell Bernstein
The New Press
The New Press
18th February 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Juvenile criminal law
Human rights, civil rights
Hardback
336
Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 21mm
A master class in social change-how a coalition of parents, activists, and prison officials brought a racist and destructive institution to its knees
Over the past twenty years, one state after another has shuttered its youth prisons and stopped trying kids as adults, slashing the number of children locked in cages by a stunning 75 percent. How did this remarkable change come about In the sequel to her 2014 award-winning bookBurning Down the House, journalist Nell Bernstein dissects the forces that converged to move us from a moral panic about "juvenile superpredators" to a time in which the youth prison is rapidly fading from view.
In Our Future, We Are Free begins and ends with the imprisoned youth who took a leading role in their own liberation. Through vivid profiles, Bernstein chronicles the tireless work of mothers, activists, litigators, researchers, and journalists to expose and challenge the racist brutality of youth prisons-as well as the surprising story of prison officials who worked from the inside to close their institutions for good. The descriptions of how communities are pursuing safety, rehabilitation, and accountability outside of locked institutions offers a model for how we might overcome our addiction to incarceration writ large.
In Our Future, We Are Free is essential reading for anyone wanting to understand how large-scale social change happens.
Nell Bernstein is the author of All Alone in the World: Children of the Incarcerated, a Newsweek"Book of the Week," and Burning Down the House: The End of Juvenile Prison (both published by The New Press). She is a former Soros Justice Media Fellow and a winner of a White House Champion of Change award. Her articles have appeared in Newsday, Salon, Mother Jones, and the Washington Post, among other publications. She lives in Albany, California.