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The Legacy Sites

A History of Racial Injustice
Buch | Hardcover
280 Seiten
2026
Monacelli Press (Verlag)
978-1-58093-732-0 (ISBN)

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The Legacy Sites -  Equal Justice Initiative
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A powerful visual and narrative journey through the Equal Justice Initiative’s Legacy Sites — the Legacy Museum, National Memorial for Peace and Justice, and Freedom Monument Sculpture Park — three landmark sites confronting America’s history of racial injustice
The Legacy Sites is a compelling and visually rich book exploring the groundbreaking work of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) through its transformative public spaces: the Legacy Museum, the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, and Freedom Monument Sculpture Park, brought together here for the first time. Through striking photography and powerful narrative, this volume invites readers to engage deeply with America’s long and ongoing struggle for racial justice.


Founded by acclaimed public interest lawyer and New York Times bestselling author Bryan Stevenson, the Equal Justice Initiative has redefined how a nation can reckon with its past. This book serves not only as a guide to the three Legacy Sites in Montgomery, Alabama, but as a meditation on the power of memory, the importance of truth-telling, and the hope found in justice-oriented action.


The book is organized into three immersive chapters — each dedicated to one of the Legacy Sites — and designed to reflect the distinct but interconnected missions of each location. First opened in 2018, with the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and the original Legacy Museum, the three sites welcome hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.


The Legacy Museum sits on a site where enslaved people were once forced to labor in bondage. It traces the direct line from enslavement to mass incarceration through original research, powerful exhibits, and digital storytelling. This chapter delves into how the Museum reclaims historical spaces to confront visitors with the realities of racial terror and the enduring consequences of systemic injustice.


The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, often referred to as the nation’s first Memorial to victims of racial terror lynchings, is a solemn and stunning outdoor space of remembrance. This chapter features moving photographs of its iconic suspended steel monuments — each representing a U.S. county where lynchings occurred — and explores the role of public memorials in collective healing. Woven throughout are stories of the victims and communities represented, grounding the Memorial in personal and historical narrative.


Freedom Monument Sculpture Park, EJI’s newest and most expansive site overlooking the Alabama River, honors the lives and resilience of enslaved people through outdoor sculpture, narrative, historical artifacts, and interpretive installations. Spanning multiple acres, it creates a contemplative space where art, history, and landscape converge. Artists featured include: Simone Leigh, Hank Willis Thomas, Rose B. Simpson, Kwame Akoto-Bamfo, and Alison Saar.


Together, these sites form one of the most ambitious and visionary public history projects in the United States. The book captures not just their physical presence, but their emotional and intellectual impact — showing how architecture, narrative, and memorial can shift national conversations.


Designed for educators, students, museumgoers, activists, and anyone interested in American history, this book is both a tribute and a call to action. Through the lens of the Equal Justice Initiative, readers are reminded that while history cannot be changed, it can be confronted — and through that confrontation, transformed.

Bryan Stevenson is a widely acclaimed public interest lawyer and the founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), a human rights organization based in Montgomery, Alabama. For over three decades, Stevenson has dedicated his career to helping the poor, the incarcerated, and the condemned. Under his leadership, EJI has won major legal challenges eliminating excessive and unfair sentencing, exonerating innocent death row prisoners, confronting abuse of the incarcerated and the mentally ill, and aiding children prosecuted as adults. Stevenson has argued multiple cases before the United States Supreme Court and has won landmark rulings, including bans on mandatory life-imprisonment-without-parole sentences for children. He is the visionary behind EJI’s Legacy Sites: the Legacy Museum, the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, and the Freedom Monument Sculpture Park — three groundbreaking cultural spaces that confront the legacy of slavery, racial terror, segregation, and mass incarceration in America. Stevenson is also the author of the New York Times bestseller Just Mercy, which was adapted into a major motion picture. He is a graduate of Harvard Law School and the Harvard Kennedy School and has received more than 50 honorary degrees for his work. Founded in 1989 by Bryan Stevenson, a widely acclaimed public interest lawyer and bestselling author of Just Mercy, The Equal Justice Initiative is a private, nonprofit organization that provides legal representation to people who have been illegally convicted, unfairly sentenced, or abused in state jails and prisons. EJI challenges the death penalty and excessive punishment and provides re-entry assistance to formerly incarcerated people. EJI works with communities that have been marginalized by poverty and discouraged by unequal treatment. Committed to changing the narrative about race in America, EJI produces groundbreaking reports, an award-winning calendar, and short films that explore our nation’s history of racial injustice. And in 2018, EJI opened the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and the original Legacy Museum, which was then followed by the Freedom Monument Sculpture Park. The Legacy Sites are part of EJI’s national effort to create new spaces, markers, and memorials that address the legacy of slavery, lynching, and racial segregation, a legacy that shapes many issues today.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 4.2.2026
Vorwort Bryan Stevenson
Zusatzinfo 300 Illustrations
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 250 x 290 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Geschichte / Politik Neuzeit bis 1918
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Hilfswissenschaften
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-58093-732-2 / 1580937322
ISBN-13 978-1-58093-732-0 / 9781580937320
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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