

Kerman has spoken at the White House on reentry and employment to help honor Champions of Change in the field. Female incarceration has risen by 800 percent in this country…I believe that we've reached a point in this country where most people are questioning whether we have made the best choices.” The fastest-growing segment of our criminal justice system and that prison population has been women. “We have the biggest prison population in human history here in the United States…Our prison population has grown from 500,000 in 1980 to 2.4 million today. “We have the biggest prison population in the world,” Kerman says. She serves on the board of the Women's Prison Association, which provides preventative services for at-risk women, works to create alternatives to incarceration, advocates against practices like shackling during childbirth and offers programs to aid reentry into society. Since her release, Kerman has worked to promote the cause of prison and criminal justice reform. The memoir was adapted into a critically-acclaimed Netflix series of the same name by Jenji Kohan. The book also raises provocative questions about the state of criminal justice in America, and how incarceration affects the individual and communities throughout the nation.

Based on the 13 months she spent in the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Connecticut on money laundering charges, Kerman’s memoir, Orange is the New Black, explores the experience of incarceration and the intersection of her life with the lives of the women she met while in prison: their friendships and families, mental illnesses and substance abuse issues, cliques and codes of behavior.
