The Law School Magazine The New York University School of Law

Features

Closing Statements

Bryan Stevenson has been speaking about compassion and justice his whole career. But with the publication of his first book, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, last October; the exoneration of a death row client after a successful Supreme Court appeal in 2012; and the release of an unflinching report on the history of lynching in the American South, he sparked a year-long national dialogue. Below are several responses to Stevenson’s work:

Printer Friendly Version

“Bryan Stevenson may, indeed, be America’s Mandela. For decades he has fought judges, prosecutors, and police on behalf of those who are impoverished, black, or both.”
Nicholas Kristof, New York Times

 

President Barack Obama has appointed Stevenson to 2 new initiatives: the Task Force on 21st Century Policing (along with Constance Rice ’84) and My Brother’s Keeper Alliance, a nonprofit designed to help boys and young men of color.

 

Kudos for Stevenson’s 2014 book,
Just Mercy:

2015 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction

100 Notable Books of 2014, New York Times

5 Most Important Books of 2014, Esquire

Top 10 Nonfiction Books of 2014, Time

Outstanding Literary Work in Nonfiction, 46th NAACP Image Awards

 

“A brilliant lawyer representing America’s conscience on a mission to guarantee equal justice for all.”
Desmond Tutu on Stevenson,
Vanity Fair

The Equal Justice Initiative documented 3,595 lynchings in 12 Southern states between 1877 and 1950.
From the EJI report Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror

 

“Yet as we cringe at the hideous acts of terror being committed elsewhere today, it’s as essential as it is painful to remember what we ourselves were once capable of.”
Carl Hiaasen, Miami Herald, on the value of Stevenson’s Equal Justice Initiative lynching report

 

“I remember specifically that [my last lawyer] told me he was trying to get me life without. And I told him, ‘Get that for someone that is guilty. I’m innocent.’ I need someone that would believe in me and would fight for my life as hard as they could, and that is when Mr. Stevenson came in.”
Anthony Ray Hinton, Stevenson’s client who was exonerated in April after nearly 30 years on death row

 

In April, Time magazine named Stevenson to its 100 Most Influential People of 2015 list in the Pioneer category.

 

 

Related Links

“Bryan Stevenson on justice, and mercy”
NYU Law website, 10/27/14

“Slavery to Mass Incarceration” (Video)
Equal Justice Initiative, 7/7/15

All 2015 Features

2015 Home