Reinserta has had a direct positive impact on more than 2,600 people in the prison system, working annually with around 180 adolescents and young people in conflict with the law and in the process of reintegration, as well as 200 women deprived of liberty and their daughters and sons.
The country's prisons are the last link in the security chain when it should be everyone's priority.
They exist because few turn to see prisons as a reflection of us as a society. Few know that what happens inside a prison directly affects those of those on the outside. That is why they created Reinserta, because they are convinced that prisons in Mexico should be a priority on the security agenda and someone should take action on the matter.
At Reinserta, they work with Invisible Mexico to improve the country's security from four axes:
- - They fight for children who are born and live in prison for up to six years in the Santa Martha Acatitla prison, not being absorbed by the environment in which they live.
- - They have the only halfway house for adolescents in the process of reintegration who have completed internment measures.
- - They release innocent people from prison to avoid social resentment and contribute to the proper administration of justice.
- - They dignify spaces in prisons because you cannot ask for successful reintegration in places that do not encourage it.