Co-Founder Spotlight: Aminah Elster

This groundbreaking anthology brings together the voices of scholars, organizers, and directly impacted people to examine how systems of “safety” — policing, prisons, surveillance, and punitive policy — often produce the very harms they claim to prevent. Chapter 7, co-authored by Aminah Elster, exposes medical neglect as a form of carceral violence, drawing on survivor testimony to show how the denial of care behind bars devastates lives and communities. The book challenges readers to imagine safety rooted not in punishment, but in dignity, justice, and collective care.

In addition to the work of Unapologetically HERS, Aminah Elster is the creator of the Transformative Investing Institute (TII), an institute dedicated to investing in the leadership and professional growth of formerly incarcerated and system-impacted professionals. She is also the Founder and Principal Consultant of Proximate Strategies Consulting, a research and evaluation firm dedicated to supporting the leadership and professional development of formerly incarcerated and system-impacted professionals through applied research, organizational strategy, leadership development, culture change, and healing-centered coaching.

Aminah recently co-founded and launched Potted Path, a plant and accessories shop designed to inspire mindfulness, creativity, and personal growth. Born from a shared love of plants and a vision for creating healing spaces, Potted Path blends nature, intentional design, and self-care into every product.

The contributors to this book aim to spark conversations, reflection, creativity, and radical planning toward abolitionist health justice.

This reading and discussion guide was created to support that process of collective inquiry and imagining. The questions are designed to help engaged readers
interrogate their own beliefs, deepen understanding, and identify ways to challenge carceral systems and practices within the institutions and communities they are a part of.

At the end of the guide, you’ll find a list of resources and organizations drawn from the book to help you connect with groups working toward abolitionist health justice and to continue your learning beyond these pages.

Other Contributions

Safety & Justic Challenge

Deepening Partnerships between People with Lived Experiences of Incarceration and System Leaders

The Lily

Incercerated woomen see echoes of their own stories

KPFA

Almeda county fines and fee reforms

Daily Kos

Education, Advocacy, and social justice for incarcerated students

Penguin Random House

All This Safety is Killing Us (Chapter 7: Medical Neglect as Carceral Violence)