Couverture de Beyond the Big House

Beyond the Big House

Beyond the Big House

De : Tess Bartlett
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Beyond the Big House Podcast, hosted by Dr Tess Bartlett, is a podcast about creativity and criminal justice. This podcast brings you thought provoking conversations and stories about creativity and criminal justice from experts, practitioners, researchers, artists, musicians and people with lived experience of the criminal justice system.Tess Bartlett Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • 06 - White Lion and working with at risk young people with Jeff Hamilton
      Aug 20 2020
      In this episode I talk with Jeff Hamilton. At the time of the interview, Jeff was working as the Victorian State Manager for White Lion. Jeff was passionate about working with at risk young people in his role at White Lion, an organisation that works with young people in the youth justice and out of home care system. Jeff talks about the different programs offered by White Lion and the importance of patience, tolerance and resilience when working with young people and how these are passed on to young people using role modelling and mindfulness. A lot of these young people have histories of emotional, physical and sexual abuse and a lot of trauma. White Lion case manage around 2500 young people and without White Lion their situations would worsen. The organisation is very focused on sustainability and being able to support the young person over a period of time. This allows them to have long term ongoing beneficial effects in their lives. Jeff shares some really inspiring stories about young people who have gone on to gain employment and stayed in that employment for five years or more and have done so because White Lion gives people a second chance. Jeff talks about the media's role in how the public perceive young offenders and how if we are able to change this perception to be one that views them as vulnerable young people who have been through a lot, rather than bad young people, then we can be part of helping them on a positive journey and pathway. Jeff now works as a youth coordinator for Cumberland Council. For more information about how to support White Lion by mentoring a young person or offering them employment visit https://www.whitelion.asn.au/ This episode is brought to you by Audible. With over 400,000 audiobooks to download you can access your 30 day free trial with two free audiobooks by heading to http://thissimplespace.com/audible. Listen here or download on apple podcasts or Spotify. If you like what you hear the best thing you can do is to please leave a review on apple podcasts and share it with someone you know.
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      49 min
    • 05 - The Beat Within - writing in juvenile halls in San Fran with David Inocencio
      Aug 13 2020
      In this episode, I talk with David Inocencio from The Beat Within. David talks about his upbringing and how he always thought he was going to follow in his father's footsteps and be a photographer, but instead in the late 1980s and early 90s that he found that he wanted to do something different and give back to the community in some ways. It was just the beginning of the gangster rap and crime rates were climbing in San Francisco and across the States and people were learning about it through music like Public Enemy and Ice Cube. David decided he wanted to make a change and was going to become a social worker and work with young people. He got a degree in social work and became a youth advocate working with young people. Some of the young people started opening up to him and sharing their journals and stories with him. At that stage there was nowhere to share these stories. But he wanted to create a platform to give them a voice. In mid-September 1996 Tupac was murdered and all the young people were devastated by his death and he asked them to write about it. The writing was incredibly powerful and he knew he had to do something with it and that was the birth of The Beat Within. From that point on he has committed the last 22 years of his life to giving a voice to young people who feel like they don't have a voice. It has grown beyond San Francisco and is a publication that has been incorporated into schools, community organisations, with adults in the adult system, and young people in juvenile halls and the community. He gets about 500 to 600 letters a month from people who have come across the writing or past writers who want to share their stories. You can learn more about the The Beat Within by heading to http://www.thebeatwithin.org/ or at https://www.facebook.com/thebeatwithin/. This episode is brought to you by Audible. With over 400,000 audiobooks to download you can access your 30 day free trial with two free audiobooks by heading to http://thissimplespace.com/audible Listen on apple podcasts or Spotify and if you like what you hear the best way you can support the show is to leave a review on apple podcasts and share it with someone you know.
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      1 h et 2 min
    • 04 - Life in prison and poetry - the 'magical form of expression' with Tony Bull
      Aug 7 2020
      Tony has been out of prison for about seven years. He talks about his life growing up in a good home and how he chose to take a different path into property crime. At that time, he was Ted Bull. He talks about how committing crime for him was like an addiction and gave him an adrenalin rush and so he just wanted more. Once he'd committed the first offence the rush continued for about 30 years. It was the prison Spartans Debating Club that was able to change everything for Tony. He also wrote so much poetry, which helped him through as it allowed him to express himself emotionally, which is impossible to do in prison. He notes that poetry is 'a magical form of expression and is sometimes the only form of expression'. It helped him deal with the solitary confines of a cell that he was in for about 18 hours a day. Tony believes that for young men who might have that same impulse or drive to get the rush from committing crime it's about being able to find the connections they have with what they love doing that is not related to crime. We also talk a lot about identity and how important it is for those exiting the prison. He notes the change in identity that he's had to alter from his 'criminal' identity to the identity he now has in the community. He has had to work on that in order to change. He believes he was saved by a fishing boat and spent three years out on the water which resulted in him changing. If he wasn't able to escape and be out on the ocean he wouldn't have been able to change. It was the easiest place in the world to recreate. He also talks about how important it is to be with the community that accepts you and believes in you. He says that they no longer see him as the person he used to be and therefore he doesn't see himself as the person he used to be. This episode is brought to you by Audible. With over 400,000 audiobooks to download you can access your 30 day free trial with two free audiobooks by heading to http://thissimplespace.com/audible. Listen below or via apple podcasts or Spotify and if you like what you hear, please leave a review on apple podcasts and share it with someone you know.
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      1 h et 4 min
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