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1 Background and education  





2 Career  





3 Awards and recognition  





4 Personal  





5 References  





6 External links  














Amy Bach






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Amy Bach
Born1968 (age 55–56)
EducationBrown University (BA)
Stanford University (JD)
Occupation(s)Founder and Executive Director
EmployerMeasures for Justice
Notable credit2010 Robert F. Kennedy Book Award
SpouseJohn Markman
Children1

Amy Bach (born 1968)[1] is an American a journalist, attorney, and author of Ordinary Injustice: How America Holds Court, for which she won the 2010 Robert F. Kennedy Book Award.[2][3] She is the Founder and Executive Director of Measures for Justice, a nonprofit that collects and publishes county-level criminal justice performance data.[4] She founded the organization after she published her book.[5]

Background and education

[edit]

Bach grew up in New York City, where she graduated from Chapin School.[6] She earned her bachelor's in English and American Literature at Brown University in Rhode Island and was a Knight Foundation Journalism Fellow at Yale Law School where she received her master's degree in law. Bach was the recipient of an Echoing Green Fellowship in 2011 and earned her Juris Doctor from Stanford Law School in 1998. [5][7]

She has also received fellowships from Soros Media, the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, and a special J. Anthony Lucas citation. Bach is a member of the New York bar, and has taught as an adjunct professor at the University of Rochester.[8]

In 2020, Bach was awarded the Dial Fellowship, named after a journal founded by Ralph Waldo Emerson and funded by Laurene Powell Jobs, through the Emerson Collective, a social change organization.[9]

Career

[edit]

Bach worked as a freelance journalist, writing for The New York Times, The Nation, Slate (magazine), The American Lawyer, and New York Magazine.[7][10][11]

In 2001, Bach wrote an article titled "Justice on the Cheap," published in The Nation. Chronicling the story of Tasha McDonald and her difficulty in the Georgia court system, it was then, when she began looking closely into the plight of people and how they were treated in the criminal court system.[12][13] Bach, who spent eight years investigating the failure of the courts, and utilizing her background as an attorney and journalist, wrote her book, Ordinary Justice, which was published in 2009.[7][3]

In 2010, part of an essay, published in The Crime Report, and adapted from a lecture in February 2010, Bach recalled:[10]

"Many did not realize that their behavior had devastating consequences for ordinary peoples' lives. Their mistakes had become so routine that they could no longer see their role in them.

This is ordinary injustice.

There was something else I noticed in that Georgia courtroom. As I watched the cases proceed, it became increasingly harder to hear what was going on. The prosecutor and defense attorney huddled around the bench, speaking softly to the judge. It looked like they were all on the same team – rather than opposing advocates duking it out before a neutral arbiter. Steve Bright, of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, asked the judge to speak up, and the judge installed a microphone. But the next day the microphone was gone. I went back and visited this court (with different sitting judges) for the next five years. There was never another microphone. And there was always a huddle."

— Amy Bach, February 15, 2010, essay adapted from the Law, Politics, and Media Lecture Series; S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University

After the publication of her book, Anthony Lewis of the New York Review of Books noted that "Bach has done something different: shown us the reality of the criminal justice process in microscopic, human detail. In different places across the country she watched went on in courtrooms. Her accounts of what she saw should open others' eyes to unwelcome reality. It is a revealing and important book,"[14] and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel wrote that the book "Should be required reading for every judge, prosecutor, defense lawyer, clerk and defendant in courthouses everywhere."[15]

in 2011, following the publication of her book, Bach Founded Measures for Justice, a nonprofit that collects and publishes county-level criminal justice performance data, where she serves as the Executive director.[4]

Awards and recognition

[edit]

Personal

[edit]

Bach is married to John Markman, a doctor at the University of Rochester Medical Center. They have one son. They reside in Rochester, New York.[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Craig, Gary. "Rochester's Amy Bach wins $100,000 award for work to improve criminal justice operations". Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ a b c "2010: "Ordinary Injustice", by Amy Bach". Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  • ^ a b c Bach, Amy (2009). Ordinary injustice: how America holds court. New York: Metropolitan Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-7447-5. OCLC 232392064.
  • ^ a b "Staff". Measures for Justice. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ a b c "Skoll | Amy Bach". Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ "The Chapin School: The Alumnae Presence at Chapin". www.chapin.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ a b c d "Amy Bach". Echoing Green Fellows Directory. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ Lahijani, Jonathan. "Amy Bach". The Charles Bronfman Prize. Retrieved 2022-11-25.
  • ^ "Amy Bach". Emerson Collective. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  • ^ a b ""Ordinary" Injustice". The Crime Report. 2010-02-25. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ "Event Participants | IJPM". Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ Bach, Amy (2001-05-03). "Justice on the Cheap". The Nation. ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ a b Imag, Steve Jennings/Getty. "Author Who Researches Criminal Justice System Awarded $100K Bronfman Prize". The Forward. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • ^ Lewis, Anthony. "Go Directly to Jail". New York Review of Books. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  • ^ "New book examines courts' systemic flaws". archive.jsonline.com. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  • ^ "Almanac & Reader". www.greenbag.org. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  • [edit]
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