Mellon Foundation Awards ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ $1.1 Million to Build on Efforts to Support Incarcerated Students
The award is part of the recently announced selection of seven recipients of more than $5 million in funding as part of its Higher Education in Prisons program.

Claremont, Calif. (June 14, 2023)βΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ has been awarded a $1.1 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in support of the Critical Justice Education (CJE) program. The grant will enable CJEβs further integration in the Claremont Colleges as well as an expansion of ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs highly successful Inside-Out program, which offers a radical and striking new approach to prison education efforts.
The Mellon Foundation of more than $5 million in funding as part of its Higher Education in Prisons program. In addition to ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ, recipients include Alliance for Higher Education in Prison, Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison, Operation Restoration, Unlocked Labs, and programs at Villanova University and Loyola University New Orleans.
The grant is a sign of the Mellon Foundationβs continued faith in
ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs work with incarcerated students.
βWe are thrilled and honored to have the Foundationβs continued faith and support in our efforts to improve higher education opportunities for incarcerated students,β said Allen Omoto, ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty. βIn our Inside-Out model, on-campus students take classes alongside incarcerated individuals, creating rich and unexpected opportunities for transformational learning, collaboration, and awareness.β
In 2018 ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ received a $1.1 million Mellon grant to establish the CJE program and coordinate collaborative justice education programs across the Claremont Colleges.
The new grant, which is for three years, will enable that work to be amplified through the creation of the Justice Education Center (JEC) across The Claremont Colleges (including Claremont Graduate University, which is a new participant in this effort).
The JEC will oversee the justice education major, the Inside-Out Education program, and foster Claremont faculty and student development and programs. The JEC will also expand educational research and development opportunities for faculty, students, and formerly incarcerated students and alumni.
βThere is an intensity to this βlearning across differenceβ approach
that is spectacular for all participating students.ββNigel Boyle, Inside-Out program director
For Professor Nigel Boyle, who directs ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs trailblazing Inside-Out program, this second award from the Foundation is an encouraging recognition that education remains vital to addressing mass incarceration in America and around the world.
βCreating a space for integrated higher education programs that bring traditional and incarcerated students together is pedagogically and institutionally radical,β Boyle said. βThere is an intensity to this βlearning across differenceβ approach that is spectacular for all participating students. Itβs great that the Mellon Foundation recognizes the power of this initiative.β
A Forbes report on the Mellon announcement notes that a recent survey by the Alliance for Higher Education in Prison shows that βonly about 600 of nearly 5,000 state and federal prisons and local jails provided higher education programs.β
For Omoto, such data is a clear indication that programs like ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs are needed now more than ever.
βΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊβs pioneering efforts,β he said, βalong with our Claremont Colleges peers provides an important blueprint for how other institutions might join us in expanding educational opportunities while also providing meaningful professional development for faculty.β
In addition to enhancing its Inside-Out classes and the CJE program, ΝΓΧΣΟΘΙϊ will also continue to explore a College Pathways initiative at the California Rehabilitation Center and with Norco Community College.
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