Skip to main content
for

Northwestern Prison Education Program receives $1 million Mellon grant

Funding will allow expansion and launch of first post-secondary educational program for incarcerated women in Illinois

EVANSTON --- The Northwestern Prison Education Program (NPEP) has received a $1 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to support the expansion of educational opportunities for incarcerated people, including the first college-in-prison program for women in Illinois.

Less than two years after philosophy professor Jennifer Lackey welcomed the inaugural cohort of 22 incarcerated students to the first credit-bearing Northwestern course at Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill, Ill., the prison education program she founded is poised to become a national model.

Lackey and her collaborators, including faculty and students from a wide range of schools and departments at the University, aim to grow the early successes of the pilot program by establishing a statewide prison education system with a powerful voice in national policy conversations around mass incarceration and criminal justice reform.

With funding from the Mellon Foundation, to be provided over a three-year period, they plan to admit new cohorts of students, extend applications to minimum-security prisons, and invest in robust re-entry support for incarcerated students upon release.

Show Full Release

Multimedia Downloads

Northwestern Prison Education Program images

Photo credit: Northwestern University