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Pilot sites celebrate, reflect on community engagement success

Pilot sites celebrate, reflect on community engagement success

Photo of District Court Judge Thomas Kelly Ryan of Johnson County, Kansas
Chief Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals emphasizes the importance of community engagement projects in the courts’ work during Tuesday’s final meeting of the Community Engagement in the State Courts Initiative.

May 17, 2023 -- More than two-dozen state court leaders and academics met Tuesday in Arlington, Virginia, to celebrate—and put the final exclamation point on—the work of the Community Engagement in the State Courts Initiative.

First launched as a response to the U.S. Department of Justice investigation of Ferguson, Missouri, the goal of the project has been to get “proximate” to socioeconomically disadvantaged, underserved communities, in order to help advance understanding of how courts can best engage these communities to address structural, institutional, and other problems which undermine trust and confidence in the courts.

“The twin pandemics of COVID-19 and renewed racial unrest around the world made these community engagement projects all the more important,” said Chief Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, who served as one of the chairs of the effort, and who currently serves as co-chair of CCJ-COSCA’s Public Engagement, Trust and Confidence committee.

Participants reflected on the long arc of the project, which included a multi-city, PBS-broadcast “Listening Tour” in 2017, but more recently, pilot projects across six jurisdictions, each of which tried a slightly different approach to engaging with their communities. Reports from the six pilot jurisdictions, as well as an online “how to” community engagement toolkit, are available on the NCSC website.

While the focus of the day-long meeting was to review and recap many of the lessons learned, participants also discussed the future of engagement efforts.

“This can’t be a moment in time—this must be a movement in time,” said Dr. Charles Barber, the Chief Diversity and Inclusion officer for the National Science Foundation.

Funding for the multi-year effort came from NCSC, the State Justice Institute, the California Endowment, and the Public Welfare Foundation.


Nominations open for William H. Rehnquist Award for Judicial Excellence

NCSC is now accepting nominations for the 2023 William H. Rehnquist Award for Judicial Excellence. The award honors judges who are taking bold steps to address the most pressing issues in their communities.

Nominees must currently hold a judicial office other than sitting chief justice, possess significant experience serving state courts, demonstrate promotion and implementation of innovation in the management of state courts, and provide leadership at the national and/or state level to improve state systems of justice.

For more information on the nomination process, visit the Rehnquist Award page on the NCSC website. Nominations must be received by June 21.