Abstract
This article describes regional institutional organizing efforts to bring racial justice to the Charlotte courts and community through a collaborative called Race Matters for Juvenile Justice (RMJJ). The authors explain community and institutional organizing in-depth using the example of minority overrepresentation in the juvenile justice system, but recognize the pervasiveness of racial and ethnic disparities. Moreover, as the Race Matters for Juvenile Justice-Charlotte Model has gained national prominence, many jurisdictions seek to replicate the collaborative and the authors, therefore, provide RMJJ’s history as well as strategies for changing the narrative through communication and education, workforce development, data and research, community collaboration, practice change, and legislation reform.
Recommended Citation
Susan McCarter et al., Bringing Racial Justice to the Courtroom and Community: Race Matters for Juvenile Justice and the Charlotte Model, 73 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. Online 641 (2017), https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/wlulr-online/vol73/iss2/6