EBOOK

There Must Be a Witness

Stories of Abuse, Advocacy, and the Fight to Put Children First

Sue Bell Cobb
(0)
Pages
232
Year
2018
Language
English

About

True child advocates are not born, they are forged out of frustration and faith. There Must Be A Witness profiles a group of child advocates in Alabama who have devoted themselves to help children thrive-and by extension, to better meet the needs of their communities. This collection of stories, narrated by Sue Bell Cobb, the state's first female Chief Justice and a former juvenile court judge, draws back the curtain on what drives such advocates. In the case of Liz Huntley, a prominent Birmingham lawyer, and Roberta Crenshaw, a former prison lay counselor, advocacy grew out of enduring the most horrific abuse. For Jannah Bailey, the director of Child Protect, her calling has always been to stand between children and violence. Cobb's own life of advocacy stems from what she saw in courtrooms across Alabama. As a jurist she was bound to serve the law, but as an advocate she championed some of the state's most sweeping child policy reforms in recent decades, including a toe-to-toe fight with back-slapping tobacco company lobbyists. Along the way she was humbled by the inspiring group of child advocates she met digging firebreaks against poverty, child abuse and neglect, inadequate medical care, and shortcomings in education. Collectively, the stories included in this volume call us to stand witness and testify to policymakers on behalf of children-to insist that government be used as a force for good in people's lives.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"This is an important work on the critical challenges our country and legal system face. Too many children in this country have been discarded, marginalized and abandoned. With the analytical insight of a Supreme Court justice and the heart and passion of a loving parent, Sue Bell Cobb's book brings much needed clarity to the urgent issues we need to confront to protect our children."
Bryan Stevenson, founder, Equal Justice Initiative (EJI)
"Sue Bell Cobb's witness to the needs of our most vulnerable children and the short-sightedness of past attempts to address these needs presents a powerful call to action. Her narratives demonstrate that our failure to adequately attend to the effects of abuse and neglect on children and families dooms future generations to the personal, economic and societal costs that flow from this trauma. Chie
Marsha Ternus, former Chief Justice, Iowa Supreme Court
"A powerful reminder that children and women are too often neglected and abused, and then have their injuries compounded by the indifference or failure of the institutions that should protect them but don't. There Must Be a Witness is also an object lesson that to get things changed for the better, we have to work and fight for what is right."
Lilly Ledbetter, namesake, The Lilly Ledbetter, namesake of The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay A

Artists