Worth Rises

What We Learned from the Wellpath Bankruptcy

Incarcerated people have a constitutional right to healthcare. Yet many corrections agencies — 29 state prison systems and nearly two-thirds of the local jails across the U.S. — outsource medical care for incarcerated people to private corporations whose profit motives stand in direct conflict with their duty to provide care.

Correctional Industries: How Governments Exploit Prison Labor to Subsidize Their Budgets

Correctional Industries: How Governments Exploit Prison Labor to Subsidize Their Budgets

There is a common misconception that private corporations are the primary beneficiaries of forced prison labor due to viral exposés of corporate exploitation by brands like Burger King. However, while private corporations may be the most vile beneficiaries of prison labor given their for-profit interests, federal, state, and local governments are the primary beneficiaries. 

Corporate Exploitation: Prison Labor in Corporate Supply Chains

Corporate Exploitation: Prison Labor in Corporate Supply Chains

When Congress passed the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865, they included a crucial exception clause that allows for slavery and involuntary servitude as punishment for crime. This clause has resulted in the forced labor of millions of people in our prisons and jails since, and the first beneficiaries of this labor were private corporations.

Series: Understanding the Many Forms of Prison Labor

People who are incarcerated and detained across our country are disproportionately Black and brown and forced to work for little to no pay under the threat of additional punitive measures, such as the loss of family visits and solitary confinement. This forced labor is pervasive and takes many surprising forms: farming crops, fighting wildfires, staffing call centers and DMV offices, stamping license plates, and much more.

Only Ending Prison Call Surveillance can Protect Our Constitutional Rights

Only Ending Prison Call Surveillance can Protect Our Constitutional Rights

Imagine you are accused of a crime and assigned a lawyer. Think about everything you might tell them to help in your defense. Now imagine that everything you said to your lawyer in moments of trust and vulnerability is handed over to the very prosecutor who is building a case against you.

Financials Reveal Securus Cashed in on the Pandemic to Revive Struggling Business

Financials Reveal Securus Cashed in on the Pandemic to Revive Struggling Business

Recently released financial statements for Aventiv Technologies – the parent company of Securus Technologies – reveal that the prison telecom corporation capitalized on the COVID-19 public health crisis to rake in massive gains on the backs of struggling families.

Securus Pulls Out of Merger with ICSolutions Following Pressure From Worth Rises

Securus Pulls Out of Merger with ICSolutions Following Pressure From Worth Rises

Yesterday, industry behemoth Securus pulled out of its agreement to purchase ICSolutions. This transaction would have further consolidated the prison telecom industry and given Securus unprecedented control, hurting competition and, in turn, public interest.

2018 National Prison Strike: Statement of Solidarity

2018 National Prison Strike: Statement of Solidarity

As an organization dedicated to decommercializing justice, we call specific attention to the National Prison Strike’s second demand: “An immediate end to prison slavery. All persons imprisoned in any place of detention under United States jurisdiction must be paid the prevailing wage in their state or territory for their labor.”