Julian Adler
Chief Innovation and Strategy Officer
Executive Team
- Policy and Research
Julian Adler (he/him/his) is the Center for Justice Innovation’s Chief Innovation and Strategy Officer and a member of the Executive Team. Julian guides the development of the Center’s policy priorities and new ventures, advancing leading-edge ideas and practices across the organization. An attorney and licensed clinical social worker, he directly oversees the Center’s New York Legal Policy team and is building a new centralized Clinical Practice team to support the organization’s more than 500 practitioners.
Julian joined the Center in 2008 as the Clinical Director at the Red Hook Community Justice Center, leading broader organizational efforts to incorporate trauma-informed care and evidence-generating practices. As the Deputy Project Director in Red Hook, Julian served as a member of the small planning team for Newark Community Solutions, the first community court in New Jersey. Next, as the Project Director in Red Hook, Julian served as the principal planner for Brooklyn Justice Initiatives, which included the Center’s first foray into pretrial justice.
Pivoting to a national portfolio, Julian led the Center’s work with the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation on the planning and launch of the Safety and Justice Challenge, an ambitious initiative to reduce the use of jails and to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the criminal legal system. He also led the Center’s work with the Arnold Ventures philanthropy on a broad range of national projects, including the planning and launch of Advancing Pretrial Policy and Research. Additionally, Julian spearheaded national portfolios on fees and fines reform and right-to-counsel. As the Director of Policy and Research, Julian shepherded the expansion of both the Research-Practice Strategies and the Data Analytics and Applied Research teams.
Julian is the co-author of Start Here: A Road Map to Reducing Mass Incarceration (The New Press), along with a range of book chapters and articles examining the intersections of the criminal legal system, social science, and mental health, and is a producer of the Center’s “New Thinking” podcast. He serves on multiple steering and advisory committees and is a co-chair of the advisory board for Wesleyan University’s Center for Prison Education.
Publications
Publications Results
- Minding the Machines: AI and the Criminal Legal Space
- "What Can I Do to Keep You Free?" Perspectives on Clinical Practice in the Criminal Legal System
- Toward Community Justice: Upstream Investment Is Criminal Legal Reform
- Plenty of Science, Not Enough Passion: Accelerating the Pace of Felony Decarceration
- Arguing The Algorithm: Pretrial Risk Assessment And The Zealous Defender
- Relationships Not Jail: A New Framework for Court-Based Treatment
- Up & Out: Toward an Evidence-Based Response to Misdemeanors
- Toward Misdemeanor Justice: Lessons from New York City
- Understanding Risk and Needs in Misdemeanor Populations
- The Criminal Court Assessment Tool: Development and Validation
- Start Here: A Road Map to Reducing Mass Incarceration
- Empirical Means to Decarcerative Ends?
- Race and Risk Assessment: Would We Know a Fair Tool If We Saw It?
- Demystifying Risk Assessment: Key Principles and Controversies
- Reducing Jail and Protecting Victims: A Roundtable on Pretrial Supervised Release
- Minding the Elephant: Criminal Defense Practice in Community Courts