Going through the Criminal Justice System is one of the most intimidating and life-changing experiences a person can have. Do you want to help make it more transparent and more navigable? Do you want to create better ways to help make this system more user-friendly, and fairer?
Join our Hack for Justice event at Stanford d.school on May 7th, sponsored by the California Department of Justice and Stanford Law School and d.school. We are bringing together people from different domains — law, design, technology, policy, and beyond — to create new solutions for making the justice system more transparent and user-friendly.
Background to the event
In September 2015, Attorney General Kamala D. Harris launched OpenJustice in an effort to improve transparency, accountability and improve criminal justice policy. It aims to provide more access to key criminal justice information by publishing downloadable data sets and sharing the key insights and information visualized through interactive graphs.
The Event
Hack for Justice aims to evolve the OpenJustice platform, by creating more visual, interactive resources that help the public understand the criminal justice system — both in terms of its processes and data about it.
Challenge 1: Data Analysis & Visualization: For those who like to explore key trends and insights, we challenge you to grapple with our criminal justice data, cross it with a host of other publicly available datasets, and identify new insights and create visualizations that tell compelling stories that will inform the public.
Challenge 2: Visualizing Criminal Justice Processes: For those who want to help people understand how the criminal justice system works, and what kind of steps and pathways await them as they go through it, we challenge you to create more visual and interactive explainers of the system. We have developed the text and content about how the system works (so you don’t need to be an expert). We’re looking for creative media — infographics, animations, videos, posters, apps, webpages, and beyond — that can help a person understand the complexities of these processes in engaging and human ways.
Logistics
We will meet on Saturday May 7th from 10:30am-5:30pm at Stanford d.school. We will help you find a team to work with (if you like), to choose one of the challenges and use the time to brainstorm, sketch, test, and refine a new solution.
We’ll end the day with with presentations, judging, and winners announced. The top creations will be featured on OpenJustice.
There will be food! We ask you to RSVP here (see form below). We’ll then send more details about logistics.
We hope you will join us at Stanford to participate in one of our two challenges on May 7th, and please feel free to forward this announcement on to others.