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The Rappaport Center welcomed Danielle Sered as the Spring Rappaport Senior Fellow in Residence. Danielle's community address was entitled, "Freedom Work in Troubled Times: The Role of Criminal Justice in Building and Sustaining a Multiracial Democracy." Danielle is the founder and executive director of Common Justice, the first program in the United States to offer survivors of serious violence a meaningful alternative to the criminal legal system—one that centers accountability, healing, and community safety rather than punishment alone. Her work has reshaped national conversations about what justice can look like when it is grounded in dignity, relationship, and repair. Widely recognized as one of the most influential thinkers and practitioners in the restorative justice and violence intervention fields, she is the author of Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and a Road to Repair. She is an Ashoka Fellow, a former Skadden Fellow, a Rhodes Scholar, and a frequent advisor to communities, courts, policymakers, and advocates seeking new approaches to safety and justice.