Mode of Program Participation

Community Organizing and Educational Programming

Participation Type

Panel

Session Title

Prisons Are Not Innovation: Post Coal Organizing in Eastern Kentucky

Session Abstract or Summary

In early 2016 Congressman Hal Rogers announced that $444 million had been allocated for the construction of a federal prison in Letcher County, Kentucky, an “economically distressed” county on the border of Kentucky and Virginia. In response to this announcement, locals formed the Letcher Governance Project, a throwback in both name and mission to the grassroots Letcher County Local Governance Project of the mid-1990s. Like the old LGP, the new LGP demands transparency from public officials and agencies; aims for democratic control of the county’s institutions and lands; and seeks to radically alter power relations in the county.

This panel will cover the historical, economic, and political trends and events that led to the development of United States Penitentiary (USP) Letcher. It will examine the history of resistance in Letcher County since the mid-1990s, as well as what it looks like to organize in a post-coal economy. It will also explore what it is like to organize for political change as a group of “millennials” in eastern Kentucky, and will discuss organizing tactics that the LGP has used to pressure leaders to consider mass incarceration and the rights of prisoners.

The panel will also supply discussion on what recent demonstrations against the prison have revealed about power structures in the region, and will provide context about how this particular fight intersects with larger trends in American society; namely, institutional racism; the exploitation of predominantly white, rural working class communities; the shift in American energy sources; rural depopulation, and so on.

Presentation #1 Title

Prisons Are Not Innovation: Post Coal Organizing in Eastern Kentucky

Presentation #1 Abstract or Summary

In early 2016 Congressman Hal Rogers announced that $444 million had been allocated for the construction of a federal prison in Letcher County, Kentucky, an “economically distressed” county on the border of Kentucky and Virginia. In response to this announcement, locals formed the Letcher Governance Project, a throwback in both name and mission to the grassroots Letcher County Local Governance Project of the mid-1990s. Like the old LGP, the new LGP demands transparency from public officials and agencies; aims for democratic control of the county’s institutions and lands; and seeks to radically alter power relations in the county. This panel will cover the historical, economic, and political trends and events that led to the development of United States Penitentiary (USP) Letcher. It will examine the history of resistance in Letcher County since the mid-1990s, as well as what it looks like to organize in a post-coal economy. It will also explore what it is like to organize for political change as a group of “millennials” in eastern Kentucky, and will discuss organizing tactics that the LGP has used to pressure leaders to consider mass incarceration and the rights of prisoners. The panel will also supply discussion on what recent demonstrations against the prison have revealed about power structures in the region, and will provide context about how this particular fight intersects with larger trends in American society; namely, institutional racism; the exploitation of predominantly white, rural working class communities; the shift in American energy sources; rural depopulation, and so on.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #1

Elizabeth is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #2

Tarence is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #3

Ada is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #4

Kendall is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky and is a member of the Letcher Governance Project. Kendall is coordinator of the STAY (Stay Together Appalachia Youth) Project.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #5

Sara is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #6

Tanya is a member of the Letcher Governance Project and lives in Letcher Co., Kentucky.

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Prisons Are Not Innovation: Post Coal Organizing in Eastern Kentucky

In early 2016 Congressman Hal Rogers announced that $444 million had been allocated for the construction of a federal prison in Letcher County, Kentucky, an “economically distressed” county on the border of Kentucky and Virginia. In response to this announcement, locals formed the Letcher Governance Project, a throwback in both name and mission to the grassroots Letcher County Local Governance Project of the mid-1990s. Like the old LGP, the new LGP demands transparency from public officials and agencies; aims for democratic control of the county’s institutions and lands; and seeks to radically alter power relations in the county. This panel will cover the historical, economic, and political trends and events that led to the development of United States Penitentiary (USP) Letcher. It will examine the history of resistance in Letcher County since the mid-1990s, as well as what it looks like to organize in a post-coal economy. It will also explore what it is like to organize for political change as a group of “millennials” in eastern Kentucky, and will discuss organizing tactics that the LGP has used to pressure leaders to consider mass incarceration and the rights of prisoners. The panel will also supply discussion on what recent demonstrations against the prison have revealed about power structures in the region, and will provide context about how this particular fight intersects with larger trends in American society; namely, institutional racism; the exploitation of predominantly white, rural working class communities; the shift in American energy sources; rural depopulation, and so on.