A recent survey of 374 education programs operating in prison by the Alliance for Higher Education in Prison found that less than 20 percent offered direct pathways to a campus program, and even fewer — 14 percent — provided reentry services.

But BPI does. BPI’s distinctive approach — pairing ambitious college-in-prison, with holistic reentry and long-term support for people leaving prison — radically expands access and opportunity, creating a pipeline directly from traditionally excluded communities into corridors of decision-making and leadership.


“My relationships crafted with the tools of mutual care and desire for successes remain the most significant and amazing part of being a BPI alumni.”

—Darryl Robinson ’15

When students earn their degree and ultimately return to home, they are met with comprehensive reentry support from BPI’s Reentry and Alumni Engagement team that spans housing, wellness, technology, career development, and continuing education. BPI has pioneered a set of career development programs that accelerate alumni professional growth, creating pathways to careers in public health, non-profit, philanthropy, education and teaching, and computer science.

ConnectEd

Launched in November 2020, the ConnectEd Workshop supports newly returning alumni in the first few critical months home. The six-week workshop is stipend-based, providing participants with critical income as they leverage the workshop toward securing employment, housing, applying to college, and accessing social services.

 

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People gathered around a table at the BPI office.

Career Development Programs

BPI’s career development programs are an opportunity for formerly incarcerated professionals to deepen their knowledge and prepare for leadership positions in research, policy, and practice in their communities. For BPI alumni, it creates a bridge from curricular specializations through coursework taken while incarcerated to career development pathways upon returning home.

 

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Public Health Fellowship presentation.

BPI alumni return home equipped with a rigorous college education and job skills, ready to launch their careers and build their lives. BPI’s Alumni Engagement team supports alumni in turning their educations into meaningful careers and works with educational institutions across the state to support alumni in their educational pursuits.

Career & Professional Development

A BPI Career Advisor stands ready to assist with alumni to identify professional development opportunities and prospective employers that complement their education and goals.

BPI’s Career and Professional Development Advisor works with alumni to identify professional development opportunities and prospective employers that complement their education and goals. BPI alumni work across the country in public health, education, philanthropy, technology, and across the advocacy and non-profit sectors.

Continuing Education

Cleveland Lovett graduates from the BardBac on campus in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY

Upon returning home, BPI alumni have enrolled in more than 40 colleges and universities to continue their degree or obtain further credentials. Alumni have attended Bard College, Columbia University, CUNY Baccalaureate, Hunter College, Yale, Georgetown University, NYU, Smith, and more.

Lifelong Connections

Beyond the comprehensive reentry programming and transitional assistance provided by BPI’s Reentry and Alumni Engagement team, the network of BPI alumni throughout New York fosters a supportive and ambitious community that builds upon formal services through networking, mutual support, and peer mentoring.

Alumni as Advocates

As BPI alumni return home, many have taken up advocacy work in New York and beyond. BPI is committed to supporting alumni advocacy through training and connections to other alumni and organizations leading vibrant advocacy work.

Communities Not Cages
Communities Not Cages

Patrick Stephens ’19 is a lead advocate for Communities Not Cages, a grassroots campaign fighting for sentencing reform in New York. The coalition is calling to: eliminate mandatory minimum sentences, including New York’s two- and three-strike laws; allowing incarcerated people to apply for a resentencing hearing after they have served, and; strengthen and expand “good time” and “merit time” laws under the Earned Time Act to encourage personal transformation in prison and reunite families.

Pamela Zimba outside Lilac House speaking into a microphone
Lilac House

Responding to the lack of transitional housing in New York’s Westchester County, Pamela Zimba ’17 founded The Lilac House, a safe and stable residence for formerly incarcerated women. Beyond housing, Pamela is building a supportive community and connecting them with area resources. The Lilac House is a member of Susan Burton’s A New Way of Life Safe Housing Network.

Outdoor #CloseRikers rally
#CloseRikers

Since 2016, Darren Mack ’13 has been an outspoken advocate and organizer for the Close Rikers Campaign. In 2020, Darren Co-Founded and is Co-Director of Freedom Agenda, a member-led project, dedicated to organizing people and communities directly impacted by incarceration to achieve decarceration and system transformation. Freedom Agenda is leading the charge to close the Rikers Island jail complex.

Stacy Burnett
From BPI to MBA

In spring 2023, BPI alumna Stacy Burnett became the first formerly incarcerated person to earn an MBA at Bard. Stacy is a 2021 BPI Public Health Fellow, completing a research project titled Public and Environmental Health Effects of Single-Use Plastics in the NYSDOCCS Food Delivery System. Throughout COVID, Stacy was a Community Engagement Specialist for New York City’s contract tracing program. Stacy is currently the Senior Product Manager at ITHAKA and Manager at JSTOR, where she works with higher education providers and government agencies to make JSTOR available to people in prison.

Shawn Young ’19 leads All of Us.
All of Us

Working across the Capital Region of New York, Shawn Young ’19 leads All of Us, a grassroots community organization he co-founded that is dedicated to Black Liberation and an end to all forms of oppression and exploitation. They provide free leadership development workshops and political education and organizing skills workshops, creating space and opportunity to hear from those in local communities, providing them information and asking questions to facilitate the development of solutions that will best fit, and come from, the communities that are most marginalized and oppressed.

Russell Craig sitting in front of his artwork
Art & Advocacy

Russel Craig ’22 is an alumnus of Bard at BPL Microcollege and a self-taught artist. Dark Reflections at Malin Gallery was Craig’s first solo exhibition in New York City. His work is part of the permanent collection at the Brooklyn Museum and has been featured in institutional exhibitions including Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration at MoMA PS1; an installation at the Philadelphia African American Museum, and; Blood, Sweat, and Tears, his first solo exhibition, at Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens. Craig co-founded Right of Return, USA, the first national fellowship dedicated to supporting formerly incarcerated artists.