Successful Inside-Out Restorative Justice Programs Are Possible
By Isabella Cain
For decades restorative justice programs within the United States have focused on outside-in tactics. How can people or groups outside of the system help those individuals inside, where the focus is primarily on what a collective we can do for you. Over the past few years this narrative is beginning to change. Programs are beginning to reflect the narrative that incarcerated individuals can help themselves and instead ask the question of how you can help you. One such program that has sparked a deep conversation about connection, transformation, and equity is The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program.
Founded in 1997, this innovative initiative brings together inside students (those who are incarcerated) with outside students (those enrolled at universities) into college courses held inside correctional facilities. These collaborative classrooms dismantle the invisible barriers between higher education and prison walls, offering a powerful example of why nonprofits should be investing and working behind bars.
At its core, Inside-Out is driven by a mission “to create opportunities for people inside and outside of prison to have transformative learning experiences that emphasize collaboration and dialogue, inviting them to take leadership in addressing vital issues of social justice.” This mission reframes education not simply as a transfer of knowledge, but as a shared act of understanding and collective inquiry. The program asks fundamental questions about justice, society, and human relationships that rarely surface in traditional classrooms.
This Inside-Out approach upends conventional pedagogy. Instead of lectures delivered to a passive audience, courses are structured more Socratically, around dialogue, reflection, and shared inquiry. Inside the prison classroom, non-incarcerated students and their incarcerated peers sit together in a circle, discuss readings, collaborate on assignments, and tackle pressing issues such as race, punishment, inequality, and community. Students are invited not just to learn about the criminal justice system, but to learn from each other’s lived experiences.
Specifically at Michigan State University (MSU), which offers a local example of Inside-Out’s transformative potential, the faculty members integrated the program into a semester-long course designed to confront stereotypes and lived realities of incarceration. Traditional students, many with minimal prior exposure to incarceration beyond media portrayals, enter the correctional facility weekly to learn alongside incarcerated students. These joint discussions on topics like rehabilitation, victimization, and systemic inequality challenge assumptions and encourage deeper insight into the complexities of the justice system in America. According to individuals involved, this shared learning experience “puts the onus on each participant to determine what they, on a personal level, are willing to do to effect the change we so obviously need. Once you have attended the classes, you can no longer feign innocence.”
Perhaps most significant is how the program extends the notion of education as liberation. Incarcerated participants often describe their involvement in Inside-Out as a turning point, a moment that creates intellectual confidence and encourages aspirations for future learning. Outside students simultaneously report enhanced empathy and critical reflection on their own lives and societal structures. These outcomes reflect one of the most compelling measures of success for the program: its ability to broaden horizons and shift perspectives on both sides of the classroom.
However, don’t just take my word on it, statistical research on the Inside-Out program highlights how sustained dialogue across differences fosters critical self-awareness, challenges stereotypes, and deepens relational growth. Participants not only gain academic insight but also develop emotional and cognitive skills such as perspective-taking, reflective thinking, and collaborative problem-solving, all of which are essential for leadership in community and professional contexts. Not only does the program allow for improvement within prison, but the skills acquired assist with integration back into society once released.
The program’s impact extends beyond individual outcomes. Inside-Out has cultivated an international network of over 1,600 trained instructors and thousands of alumni across multiple countries, linking universities with correctional facilities in partnerships that champion justice-oriented education. These connections have catalyzed further initiatives like think-tanks and community projects that continue to push against carceral walls and reimagine justice and restorative programs as something built with incarcerated individuals, not done to them.
For nonprofits committed to justice, equity, and community development, Inside-Out offers both inspiration and a blueprint. Investing in incarcerated individuals, whether through educational programs, leadership development, or collaborative partnerships, yields returns far beyond test scores. It reshapes narratives, builds bridges of understanding, and prepares all participants to confront the root causes of social challenges together. It affirms that investing in humane, dialogical justice is not merely compassionate, but strategically powerful in advancing social transformation.
As Inside-Out continues to grow and adapt, it stands as a testament to the potential of education to break down barriers and sow the seeds of collective change. For organizations asking why they should invest behind bars, the answer may be found in the countless classrooms where laughter, debate, and mutual respect echo where only isolation once existed, and where bridges, not barriers, are being built daily.
Sources:
Inside-Out CenterThe Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program
Inside-Out CenterThe Inside-Out Center | About Inside-Out
Inside Out Prison Program – Center for Community Engaged Learning – Michigan State University
The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program: Intersections between Feminism and Communication | MDPI
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