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Book by GSSWSR Alum Barb Toews Explores Life Without Parole

June 21, 2022
Book cover for Still Doing Life

How do prisoners serving life sentences give their lives purpose and hold onto hope in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds? Some answers to that question can be found in Still Doing Life: 22 Lifers, 25 Years Later, a newly published book by , Ph.D. 鈥14, who earned her doctorate at Bryn Mawr鈥檚 一品探花论坛 School of Social Work and Social Research, and Howard Zehr.

The book, a follow-up to Zehr鈥檚 1996 volume, Doing Life, features portraits and interviews with 22 men and women serving life in Pennsylvania prisons without the possibility of parole. Zehr, a criminologist and restorative justice expert took the photographs (two of each lifer, 25 years apart) and carried out the interviews. Toews, who is an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of Washington Tacoma, wrote the introduction and accompanying essays.

A traveling exhibit based on the book will be on display at the Free Library of Philadelphia from June 27-August 12, with an opening reception that Toews will attend (with Zehr joining virtually) taking place on Thursday, June 30, from 6 to 8 p.m. The event is free (RSVP ).

Barb on bench 2
Barb Toews, Ph.D. '14

For Toews, who knows some of the lifers in the book from earlier work with the Pennsylvania Prison Society, this was 鈥渘ot just an academic project,鈥 but 鈥渁 labor of love,鈥 and a way to respect and honor the men and women she came to know through her practice work. Toews鈥 career started out in the area of victim-offender dialogue, moved into restorative justice work in prisons, and now focuses on environmental design and its relationship to restorative justice and trauma healing.

For the lifers in the book, 鈥済limmers of hope鈥 take many forms, Toews says. 鈥淕iving back is a huge theme鈥攈elping younger people when they come into prison, trying to keep people from coming back in.鈥 Many, she says become involved in healing work鈥攙olunteering in hospice for example鈥攊nside the institution. Others connect with organizations on the outside that are doing social service or social justice work. Many, she says draw on their faith or spirituality. Most importantly, they don鈥檛 let their crime define them. They explore who they are as people, Toews says, and then strive to 鈥渓ive to their fullest self.鈥

The purpose of the book, Toews says, is to start a dialogue. 鈥淗oward and I certainly have our own opinions about life sentences, but we're not trying to foist an agenda on anyone.鈥 Instead, they aim to humanize the people in the book and get readers thinking about what a life sentence means and whether it is achieving what we want in society. The authors hope policy makers will read the book, but also 鈥渏ust everyday people on the street,鈥 Toews says, since thinking about these issues 鈥渋nfluences how you vote, how you think about your community relationships.鈥

Some of the book鈥檚 more universal takeaways center around assuming responsibility for our actions. 鈥淲e all hurt people in our daily life,鈥 Toews says. 鈥淲e just don't all do it in a way that鈥檚 fatal. What can we take away from this about our own need to step up and be accountable?鈥