
Community Investment as a Violence Reduction Strategy
Violence reduction strategies are all too often centered in a criminal justice system response while ignoring the economic alternatives that can play a much more
The Chicago Justice Podcast takes apart the stories we’re told about crime and public safety. It doesn’t sanitize the truth about crime and justice; it interrogates it. We dig into the data, the policies, and the power structures that shape who gets punished, who gets protected, and who gets ignored. Some conversations are uncomfortable. Others are infuriating. All of them are necessary.
Through data-driven analysis and hard, unfiltered conversations with researchers, reform advocates, and people challenging the system from the inside, each episode dismantles the myths that dominate public debate. From racial bias and police violence to surveillance, incarceration, and policy failures that devastate communities, we reveal how justice actually works, and who it really serves.
If you’re willing to question what you’ve been told, confront what’s broken, and wrestle with what real accountability and safety could actually look like, this podcast is for you.

Violence reduction strategies are all too often centered in a criminal justice system response while ignoring the economic alternatives that can play a much more

The current fight for decades of police misconduct files has its roots in a police department, police accountability system, and a political system that had

The contact tracing that is all over the news since the start of the pandemic can arguably have an impact on gun violence in Chicago.