Has Anything Changed? Police Accountability Five Years After George Floyd

It’s been five years since the murder of George Floyd sparked a national reckoning. While some reforms have been proposed or enacted, many communities in Michigan are still asking: Has anything truly changed?

On Wednesday, May 28 from 12:00–1:30 PM, join us for a special Michigan Statewide Violence and Incarceration Prevention Learning Community session focused on police accountability. We’ll hear from grassroots organizers, community leaders, and policy experts about what’s working, what still needs to change, and how we can collectively push for better systems of safety and justice.

This session will be moderated by Michael Taylor and will include space for questions, dialogue, and resource sharing.

💡 This is part of MI-CEMI’s Learning Community, a first-of-its-kind statewide space designed for those advancing efforts in restorative justice, police accountability, reentry, violence intervention, and incarceration prevention across Michigan.

Hosted by MI-CEMI in collaboration with the Detroit Justice Center, Friends of Restorative Justice, Emergent Justice, and Michigan Roundtable for Just Communities.

Register now

The post Has Anything Changed? Police Accountability Five Years After George Floyd first appeared on Michigan Collaborative to End Mass Incarceration.

This website is a collection of resources from our coalition member websites. For the newest information, please refer to the original source (at the bottom of the article).

Our Members:

  • Michigan Collaborative to End Mass Incarceration
  • Voting Access for All Coalition