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ethics of care

Welcome.

Get to know jailhouse lawyers and their loved ones through the words, wisdom, and experiences of incarcerated individuals who teach themselves the law to advocate for themselves and the rights of their peers. 

Please take care as you interact with these stories as they provide insight into alternatives and solutions to mass incarceration, but also touch upon difficult content, including confinement, medical neglect, and death, and retaliation that jailhouse lawyers routinely experience– from solitary confinement to transfers and restrictions on accessing law libraries and resources – simply because they seek to know, use, and shape law.

Additionally, please approach this website with respect, care, responsibility, including without an intent of exploitation.

This website was crafted on these principles, and we hope you enter this space feeling the same.

– Flashlights Team

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Aaron Eaton

I wish the world could read this letter so that they could know this:
Jailhouse lawyers are having amazing successes in court and need to be recognized in a way that can be meaningful when they come home.
The people who are in charge are stopping the individuals from being able to reach out. The people in charge sabotage
The system refuses to help any one get out of prison.
The inhumane treatment of incarcerated people. The way that incarcerated people advocate for themselves often to no avail.
GENDERMan
which state do they live in?Oregon
length of incarceration--
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