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  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Photographer Richard Ross has documented the U.S. juvenile justice system

  • for the better part of a decade.

  • In tonight's Brief But Spectacular, Ross shares what it feels like to honor the voices of

  • children behind bars.

  • His books "Juvie Talk" and "Girls in Justice" are available online.

  • RICHARD ROSS, Photographer: I went to a juvenile detention center in Texas.

  • And I was used to photographing architecture, but then, all of a sudden, I started talking

  • to a couple of kids there that were very fragile, didn't speak any English.

  • And I realized that I was the conduit for their voice.

  • When I would go into these institutions, I would knock on the door of the cell, I would

  • take off my shoes, I would ask for permission to come in.

  • And then I would sit on the floor of the cell.

  • I would give that child authority physically above me.

  • And these were usually teenagers, and they were isolated, bored, lonely.

  • And somebody interested in paying attention to them, they loved it.

  • These kids all live under the umbrella of trauma, poverty, abuse, neglect.

  • And I'm trying to figure out the world where they get the right resources to help them,

  • and they don't go into the deeper end of the system.

  • Every one of these children need mental health services.

  • These are kids without a voice from families without resources, from communities without

  • power, and that's got to change somehow.

  • Getting the images into the hands of the right people to effect change is the battle that

  • I do.

  • The Senate and House was voting to renew the act that kept children in separate courts.

  • There was an exhibition of my work in the Capitol Rotunda.

  • And then, when the actual vote was taking place, Senators Grassley and Durbin both had

  • copies of my book when they were voting.

  • I create these images because data, while it's incredibly important, exists in fluorescent

  • sterility, yearning for a fragile voice to make it comprehensible on human terms.

  • When you have kids from one zip code that are more likely to go to prison than college,

  • then society has failed them, rather than they have failed us.

  • So, instead of figuring out how to change these kids to fit into our institutions, we

  • have to rearrange our thinking and figure out how our institutions change to fit these

  • kids.

  • You have seen these images.

  • You have a glimpse of who these kids are.

  • Ask yourself, what would you do if this was your kid?

  • My name is Richard Ross, and this is my Brief But Spectacular take on juvenile injustice

  • in America.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: So powerful.

  • And you can see all episodes in our Brief But Spectacular series on our Web site.

  • That's PBS.org/NewsHour/Brief.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Photographer Richard Ross has documented the U.S. juvenile justice system

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