By Ivan Kilgore
Final week, I appeared—remotely—from a California jail cell on a panel at North Central School in Naperville, Ailing. The event was a screening of the Oscar-nominated documentary “The Alabama Answer,” a movie that chronicles the retaliatory violence and systemic repression confronted by incarcerated organizers in Alabama.
I’ve participated in lots of interviews over the previous decade as an incarcerated journalist. However this was completely different.
As college students, school and neighborhood members crammed the auditorium, I skilled a sense that’s tough to articulate: humility blended with a quiet sense of accomplishment. Not pleasure in private recognition—however in collective battle. The movie they’d gathered to observe was born out of labor many people started years in the past with the Free Alabama Motion. What began as jail labor strikes and contraband telephone interviews had advanced right into a documentary seen on the world stage.
From a jail cell, we helped create a story that might not be buried.
The start of an incarcerated journalist
My journey as an incarcerated journalist started in 2014, after the publication of my e-book “Home Genocide,” which examined systemic racism and the jail pipeline. By way of a mutual connection, I used to be launched to organizers throughout the Free Alabama Motion.
On the time, I used to be housed in a maximum-security facility in Northern California. We used contraband cell telephones—not as devices of defiance, however as instruments of democratic participation.
These telephones allowed us to doc situations, set up nationally and join straight with journalists and advocates. When official channels had been closed, we constructed our personal.
That work was not theoretical. It was pressing.
Inside prisons, info is tightly managed. Official press releases sanitize actuality. “Accepted” jail newspapers typically operate as home organs—permitted to publish redemption narratives however prohibited from investigating workers abuse, medical neglect or systemic retaliation.
So we constructed what I now name forward-looking journalism: reporting that doesn’t merely ask how people can change, however how establishments should.
Constructing a community of reality
Over time, our community expanded. We collaborated with impartial media retailers, coverage researchers and universities. We hosted on-line boards. We documented the unfold of COVID-19 inside prisons, contradicting public claims that incarcerated folks had been being protected. We filmed situations that the general public was by no means meant to see.
It was this synergy—between incarcerated organizers, outdoors journalists and advocacy networks—that finally helped make “The Alabama Answer” potential.
The documentary exposes how Alabama jail officers responded to peaceable labor strikes with solitary confinement, violence and communication blackouts.
Watching the movie’s trajectory—from underground organizing to Oscar nomination—I felt a profound sense of humility. Not as a result of the story was lastly seen, however as a result of so many folks risked the whole lot to make it seen.
Prisons as laboratories of censorship
But because the panel dialogue unfolded at North Central School, one other realization emerged— one that ought to concern anybody who cares in regards to the First Modification.
The mechanisms used to silence incarcerated journalists are now not confined to jail partitions.
For many years, prisons have functioned as laboratories for speech suppression. Courts have granted correctional directors extraordinary deference underneath the logic of “safety.” Mail is censored. Cellphone calls are monitored. Publications are banned. Retaliation for reporting misconduct is frequent however tough to litigate. Entry to know-how is criminalized.
On this managed surroundings, lawmakers and officers take a look at the boundaries of how far speech may be restricted underneath the guise of order.
What begins in jail hardly ever stays there.
A well-known sample
Right now, we see growing efforts throughout the nation to discredit journalists as enemies of the state, limit entry to public data, penalize whistleblowers, and focus management over info flows.
We see strategic lawsuits designed to intimidate reporters.
We see laws that narrows protest rights and expands surveillance authorities.
We see public officers making an attempt to outline which journalists are official—and that are not.
For these of us who’ve lived underneath probably the most excessive types of institutional censorship, these developments really feel acquainted.
In jail, directors typically body investigative reporting as a menace to security. They argue that exposing abuse undermines morale or incites unrest. Courts ceaselessly settle for these rationales with minimal scrutiny.
The result’s a parallel speech regime: one by which constitutional protections exist in idea however are diluted in follow.
The contagion of speech hierarchies
The hazard isn’t merely that incarcerated journalists are silenced. The hazard is that society turns into accustomed to the concept sure courses of individuals may be excluded from significant speech protections.
When that precept takes root, it is just a matter of time earlier than it expands.
On the panel in Naperville, college students requested considerate questions in regards to the relationship between jail censorship and broader democratic decline. Their curiosity gave me hope. However hope have to be paired with vigilance.
The First Modification is commonly celebrated as a cornerstone of American identification. But its power relies upon not on rhetoric, however on utility—particularly in unpopular contexts.
If we tolerate censorship in prisons as a result of the folks affected are incarcerated, we normalize a hierarchy of speech rights.
And hierarchies are contagious.
Why incarcerated voices matter
The screening of “The Alabama Answer” was a second of recognition—not just for the Free Alabama Motion, however for the concept reality can emerge from the margins.
It affirmed that incarcerated persons are not merely topics of tales. We’re storytellers, analysts, and witnesses.
However it additionally underscored how fragile that house stays.
The identical institutional buildings that when tried to suppress our reporting—restrictive communication insurance policies, imprecise safety justifications, retaliatory self-discipline—are actually mirrored in efforts to marginalize important journalism outdoors jail partitions.
When officers body investigative reporting as destabilizing, when entry to info is narrowed underneath broad safety claims, when energy determines credibility, democracy contracts.
Journalism as democratic oversight
Prisons have lengthy been America’s democratic blind spot.
What occurs behind partitions is handled as distinctive, disconnected from civic life. But prisons are public establishments funded by taxpayers and ruled by regulation. They aren’t constitutional voids. If something, they’re stress factors the place constitutional rules are examined most intensely.
My participation within the North Central School panel was made potential by years of collaboration between incarcerated and free-world advocates who refused to simply accept silence as inevitable.
That collaboration is what UBFSF – the United Black Household Scholarship Basis – seeks to domesticate extra deliberately: a faculty of forward-looking journalism rooted in accountability, moral partnership, and systemic critique.
The aim isn’t confrontation for its personal sake.
It’s transparency.
The price of silence
I don’t romanticize the dangers. Reporting from jail carries penalties. Housing assignments can change. Privileges can disappear. Casual retaliation is tough to show however simple to really feel.
But the choice—silence—carries its personal price.
When incarcerated voices are excluded from public discourse, society loses entry to firsthand data about state energy in its most concentrated type.
With out that data, oversight weakens.
Abuse festers.
Democratic norms erode quietly.
A journey from isolation to dialogue
Standing—just about—earlier than college students in Illinois, I felt the burden of that actuality. I additionally felt gratitude.
Gratitude that the work begun with contraband telephone calls and underground organizing might attain an instructional auditorium.
Gratitude that younger persons are prepared to interrogate methods relatively than settle for official narratives.
Gratitude that collective battle can yield cultural influence.
However accomplishment shouldn’t breed complacency.
A warning embedded within the story
If prisons have served as testing grounds for speech suppression, then defending incarcerated journalists isn’t a distinct segment concern—it’s a democratic crucial.
The wall between jail censorship and public censorship is thinner than we think about. The lesson of “The Alabama Answer” isn’t solely that repression exists. It’s that resistance, when networked and protracted, can pierce isolation. It may well remodel native battle into nationwide dialog.
The query now could be whether or not we are going to acknowledge the warning embedded in that story.
For years, incarcerated organizers had been instructed their voices didn’t matter. That nobody would hear. That safety considerations outweighed speech rights. But the documentary’s nomination proves in any other case.
The general public will interact when given entry to unfiltered reality.
Journalism—whether or not produced inside or outdoors—should stay free to problem energy. If we permit exceptionalism in a single area, we invite erosion in one other.
I’m humbled by how far this journey has come—from a maximum-security cell to a school auditorium screening an Oscar-nominated movie linked to our work.
From clandestine telephone calls to public panels.
From isolation to dialogue.
However humility additionally calls for honesty: the battle without spending a dime expression isn’t over. It’s evolving. Prisons confirmed us what speech suppression seems to be like in its most distilled type. The duty now could be to make sure that these ways don’t develop into normalized elsewhere.
In regards to the writer
Ivan Kilgore is an incarcerated writer, activist, archivist, and founding father of the United Black Household Scholarship Basis (UBFSF), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit he established in 2014 from a maximum-security jail in Northern California.
His writings are taught at universities in the USA and France, contributing to important conversations on incarceration, justice and Black household legacy.
In 2021, Chapter Eight of his e-book “The Zo” was tailored into a brief movie by The Marshall Venture and obtained two Emmy Award nominations.
By way of his literary work, archival preservation, and advocacy, Kilgore paperwork lived experiences of incarceration whereas creating academic pathways for underserved communities.
The opinions expressed on this commentary are these of the author and never essentially these of the AFRO.


















