Dr. Stephanie Lake joins dozens of students on discussions of race, justice and police brutality.
When Criminal Justice Program Director Stephanie Lake, Ph.D., tackles a charged subject like race and police brutality, she brandishes what she describes as her 鈥渟cholar-activist鈥 passion, enlisting her students in organizing and participating in events that probe behind the headlines.
Case in point: In March 2015 the Criminal Justice Club participated in 鈥淭he Truth Telling Project: A Truth Initiative for Ferguson and Beyond,鈥 in which speakers who had attended the Ferguson demonstrations shared their experiences witnessing police brutality. It was just one of more than a dozen events the criminal justice program and club have initiated or participated in.
Caterina Velazquez, a junior and member of the Criminal Justice Club, said she finds hearing the perspective of people of color who have experienced brutality 鈥渆ye-opening.鈥 Criminal Justice Club Vice President Shayla Clarke ’16 said these events are impactful because 鈥渢hey not only inform us about the good and bad of the system, they make us take a step back and try to figure out how we can change it.鈥
鈥淲hile the primary goal is to educate, we take it a step further and engage,鈥 Dr. Lake said, adding, 鈥淭his is a model of educational activism we have embraced on campus. It is a way to empower people to see that all significant social change is from the bottom up.鈥
The project was led by Conversations on Race and supported by the , the Collaboration Project and the Racial Justice Alliance. The Criminal Justice Club also held its own event on Ferguson, 鈥淜now Your Rights, Above the Law: Police Brutality and Reform,鈥 with Jason Starr of the ACLU鈥檚 Nassau County Chapter. Starr 鈥渇ocused on the rights one has as an individual under the Constitution when searched or detained鈥 said Sophia Parisi ’16, Criminal Justice Club president. Parisi found such events memorable because 鈥渇aculty, students and others were willing to collectively address and discuss racial injustice and rethink the role of police in societies.鈥

A young protestor declaring “Racial Justice Matters” is depicted in chalk in front of the Ruth S. Harley University Center during the 2015 Chalk UP! event. The work was done by Daniel Martin, now a junior.
At Chalk UP!, sophomore Daniel Martin 鈥渋nspired the campus with a large, powerful image of a young black protestor with fist raised high, declaring ‘Racial Justice Matters,’鈥 Dr. Lake said. Another display included the last known words of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Oscar Grant and Eric Garner, four men who died at the hands of police or law enforcement. Following Garner鈥檚 death came 鈥淲e Can鈥檛 Breathe: A Discussion on Race, Police Use of Force and the Law: From Mike Brown to Eric Garner and Beyond.鈥 The event drew 100 participants and followed a 鈥渄ie in鈥 in which 40 people protested by lying on the ground.
Dr. Lake, who is also a sociology department faculty member, joined 果酱视频 in 2002 to start the criminal justice program. 鈥淚 consciously created a program with a foundation in the social sciences,鈥 she said. Dr. Lake continues to bring that commitment to putting principles into practice to 果酱视频 today.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director听
p 鈥 516.237.8634
e 鈥 twilson@adelphi.edu