The Redemption Project
The Redemption Project: Systems Explained
Student resources, civic explainers, criminal justice lessons and reverse Socratic content designed to help students think clearly about public systems. newsroom.theredemptionproject.news
Autor
The Redemption Project
Categoría
Web del podcast
Último episodio
23 de jun. de 2026
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Episodios
You Can’t Remove Incentives and Expect Compliance 23.06.2026 0:18
This segment explores why incentives matter in criminal justice and reentry systems. Compliance does not happen in a vacuum. When individuals are given no incentives for positive behavior, accountability systems often fail. We discuss how structured incentives encourage responsibility, reduce violations, and support long-term success while still maintaining supervision and consequences. The Redemp...
Criminal Justice Is Tested After Release 19.05.2026 0:52
by Brandon Burley and The Redemption Project Sentencing may dominate debate, but many of the most important public safety outcomes begin after someone returns to the community. We still measure criminal justice at the wrong moment. Most public debate focuses on sentencing, incarceration levels, and whether punishment sounds tough enough. But the most important question usually begins after someone...
County Commission vs. City Council: Who Controls What? 18.04.2026 10:58
Many people know they vote for both city and county officials, but fewer people understand what each level of local government actually controls. In Season 3, Episode 3 of Systems Explained , Brandon Burley explains the practical difference between a city council and a county commission: who they govern, what services they oversee, and why both can affect your daily life at the same time. This epi...
Police Department vs. Sheriff’s Office: Who Actually Has Authority? 15.04.2026 12:05
Most people know that police officers and sheriff’s deputies both wear badges and answer calls, but the agencies behind them are built very differently. Brandon Burley explains the practical difference between a city police department and a county sheriff’s office: who they serve, how they are funded, who they answer to, and why one is usually appointed while the other is elected. This episode als...
Food Bank vs. Food Pantry: What Most People Get Wrong 12.04.2026 7:49
Most people use the terms food bank and food pantry like they mean the same thing. They do not. In this first episode of Systems Explained , Brandon Burley explains how the food distribution system actually works: why a food bank is usually a large supply center, why a food pantry is the local place where families actually receive food, and why understanding that difference matters if you want you...
Redemption, Research, and What Actually Works in Prison Reform A Conversation with Dr. Robin LaBarbera 15.02.2026 1:27:06
What actually changes lives inside prison—and what only sounds good on paper? In this extended conversation, Brandon Burley sits down with Dr. Robin LaBarbera , a leading researcher on prison-based theological education, reentry, and well-being inside correctional systems. Drawing from years of firsthand research inside prisons and jails, Dr. LaBarbera explains why transformation cannot be measure...
Addiction Is Distributed Evenly. Help Is Not. | Commentary on Recovery Gaps in East Tennessee 12.02.2026 5:55
In this narrated commentary, Brandon Burley reflects on his recent opinion piece examining why addiction impacts every community—but recovery resources often do not. Drawing from reporting in East Tennessee, the episode explores how smaller cities like Oak Ridge experience the same pressures as larger urban centers—substance misuse, fractured families, and relapse—without the same concentration of...
What a Tennessee Pardon Really Means — and What It Doesn’t 05.02.2026 3:13
In this episode, Brandon Burley breaks down one of the most misunderstood parts of criminal justice: pardons . Following Tennessee Governor Bill Lee’s recent decision to grant clemency to 33 individuals—including a high-profile recipient—public conversation quickly blurred the line between forgiveness, expungement, and erasure of a criminal record. This episode explains, in plain terms, what a par...
Why Chattanooga’s New Reentry Program Matters for Public Safety 29.01.2026 2:55
n this Season 4 episode of The Redemption Project , Brandon Burley narrates and comments on a letter to the editor he wrote for the Chattanooga Times Free Press about a reentry support program coming to the city—one with a documented record of reducing recidivism. Drawing from firsthand experience in law enforcement and direct visits to Men of Valor campuses in Tennessee, Brandon explains why stru...
Public Safety Isn’t Just Policing — It’s Second Chance Hiring 22.01.2026 3:14
In this narrated episode, Brandon Burley reads and reflects on an opinion piece originally published in The Daily Memphian examining why second chance hiring is a public safety issue—not just an employment one. While the article focuses on Memphis, the argument applies far beyond one city. When people return from prison or jail without access to work, housing, transportation, or licensing pathways...
“What People Don’t See About Life After Jail in Knoxville” | Article Read + Commentary 15.01.2026 2:15
In this episode of The Redemption Project podcast (Season 4, Episode 3), I read and comment on my article originally published in Knox TN Today: “What People Don’t See About Life After Jail in Knoxville.” This piece sheds light on the hidden challenges people face after leaving jail—beyond what most of the public sees or understands. From housing and employment barriers to healthcare gaps and soci...
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