Submitted
Reimagining Pathways to Employment in the US Challenge

Fighting Injustice Standing Together

Team Leader
Schai Schairer
Solution Overview
Solution Name:
Fighting Injustice Standing Together
One-line solution summary:
Providing women-specific tools, resources, training, skills and care to incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals.
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Problem: Women in prison receive dismal levels of attention, care, programs and services which make re-entry, and finding & obtaining sustainable jobs and livelihoods more difficult. 

Solution: In addition to women-friendly resources, we customize women-specific programs and services for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals. These programs include public speaking, theater, resume writing, goal-setting, interview prep, and job search workshops. We differentiate our services by taking a woman-first approach, and using women-led forums to tailor every level of service we provide. 

Scaling: Currently, we serve the Maryland Correctional Institute for Women. Before we introduced these services, they did not exist in MCIW. We began scaling our out-of-prison services by offering goal-setting, interview prep, job search and resume writing to anyone in the country through our online Listening & Support Hotline (the only hotline of its kind). Our women-specific methodology can be applied to more than one women's prison.

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What specific problem are you solving?

The most basic criminal justice reform model has 8 stages: 
Environment > Crime > Law Enforcement > Trial > Sentencing > Corrections > Re-entry >>> Recidivism

Fighting Injustice Standing Together injects itself into two stages of the larger criminal justice reform model: Corrections & Re-entry. 

These two areas are uniquely important because:

  • women have harder times finding jobs then men after being released from prison;
  • power dynamics make women more vulnerable inside a prison system;
  • women of color (per capita) are disproportionately locked up; 
  • women of color do not benefit from programs like "ban the box" because employers just assume the worst from black people; and,
  • women of color are disproportionately impacted employment-wise during COVID-19 because they are returning to lower-income communities where more businesses are shutdown

These two stages are inextricably linked to reimagining pathways to employment. First, inside women's prisons, females do not receive the same amount of programs as men, and the services they receive are modeled after men's programs, which overlooks women's unique struggles and challenges. 

Secondly, out-of-prison, their support structures are depressing. They return to a society that neglects them and does not provide the mentors, leaders or connections a person needs to transform lives.

What is your solution?

Fighting Injustice Standing Together delivers women-specific resources and programs inside and outside of prisons. The kinds of programs we facilitate are public speaking/poetry, theater, resume writing, job search, interview prep and goal-setting with professionals/mentors. We sponsored forums with formerly incarcerated women who took a women-first approach to creating our workshops based on lessons learned and experience. This includes starting out workshops with personal empowerment and individuality -exercises, -games and -stories, ensuring careful consideration for sensitivities and feedback, and using resources and tools that have been specifically tailored for women.

Prior to COVID-19, these services were delivered shoulder-to-shoulder with the women we serve. During COVID-19 we had to adjust to distance services only. Recently, we have launched our Listening and Support Hotline chat tool that formerly incarcerated individuals can connect with to obtain services and resources remotely. We have customized a process for women across the country to obtain our job-related services through this technology. No other online platform exists like our Listening and Support Hotline that serves formerly incarcerated women.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

Our target population primarily focuses on incarcerated women who are planning to be released in the future and desire to have a job, and formerly incarcerated women who are already released and actively looking for a job. These are women who make up one of the most vulnerable populations in the United States, and who receive little to no job-related services to support them. 

The Fighting Injustice Standing Together workshops have been shown to increase women's confidence, empower their voices, elevate their pursuit of goals, and prepare them with life skills they have never received before. Our program also provides women with physical products they can take away, such as customized resumes (built shoulder-to-shoulder with professionals) and a list of jobs researched by our team. In some cases, our goal-setting sessions have led to direct job referrals and access to sustainable jobs and livelihoods. 

We have previously conducted surveys of our workshops with women who have been through our program, and also have partnered with George Washington University to allow graduate students to assess our program in the future (post COVID-19). We continually host forums and brainstorming workshops with formerly incarcerated women to gather their inputs on how to serve women more effectively. 

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Drive resources and support to Black, Indigenous, and Latinx entrepreneurs and innovators
Explain how the problem, your solution, and your solution’s target population relate to the Reimagining Pathways to Employment in the US Challenge and your selected dimension.

We provide a segment of the population that is drastically overlooked with knowledge and skills needed to access jobs and livelihoods in the economy. Businesses are demanding communication skills in the future. Our workshops enhance women's speaking skills with a focus on audience, context, intent, and clarity. Communication skills should not be overlooked as a dimension to consider because of the layers of job-discrimination women receive once released from prison (based on looks, accents, or background checks). Strategic and confident communications are pivotal. Future initiatives include business development and technology workshops such as Adobe, and Microsoft office classes.

In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Washington D.C., DC, USA
If your solution is already being implemented in the US, in which US state(s) do you currently operate?
  • Maryland
  • Virginia
In which US state(s) will you be operating within the next year?
  • Maryland
  • Virginia
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth
Who is the team lead for your solution?
Schai Schairer
How many people work on your solution team?

We are a team of 2 full-time, 1 part-time, and ~5 volunteers.

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: What is your approach to building a diverse, equitable, and inclusive organization?

Our organization is small, but diverse. It was started by Schai Schairer (myself) who is black, and my colleague Laura Tarantino, who is Latino and formerly incarcerated. Our board of directors is made up of white and minority women who are also mentors of ours. We value diversity very much because the women we help come from extremely diverse backgrounds. In our 1023 nonprofit documentation, we used the MIT Living Wage calculator to establish equitable rates. 

More About Your Solution
About Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Partnership Opportunities
Solution Team:
Schai Schairer
Schai Schairer
Laura Tarantino
Laura Tarantino