Time magazine award-winning photojournalist Steve Liss's intimate, often disturbing portrait of children's lives in juvenile detention.
Steve Liss is an award-winning photographer for Time magazine, where he has worked since 1976. Forty of his photographs have appeared on the cover of Time, and he has won numerous awards from the World Press Association and the National Press Photographers' Association, including First Place: Magazine Picture Story in 1996 and First Place: Magazine Feature in 2003. In 2004, he was the recipient of the Soros Criminal Justice Journalism Fellowship for his work on No Place for Children.
"These powerful photographs in No Place for Children illuminate what may well be the darkest and least explainable corner of our societyothe tragedy of our juvenile justice system. Children who desperately need an education are assigned a prison cell instead, at far greater cost to the federal, state and local treasures. The neglect they endure behind bars only compounds the likelihood they will commit crimes after their release. Steve Liss has performed an extraordinary service for the nation, if we have enough sense to learn from it." oSenator Edward M. Kennedy
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