Imperfect Innocence: Navigating Public Scrutiny and Impossible Expectations after Exoneration

dc.contributor.advisor

Buckley, Stephen

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Wertheimer, Storey

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2025-07-25T23:37:31Z

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2025-07-25T23:37:31Z

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2025-07-25

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International Comparative Studies

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The innocence movement in the United States has gained significant traction since the 1990s, and 3,659 individuals have now been freed after being wrongfully convicted. While many used to see the exoneration day as a person’s happy ending, it is now well-established that exonerees face an array of economic and personal challenges post-release. But beyond these tangible struggles lies a less concrete and less researched challenge: the social pressures of life after incarceration. In my research, I explore how after exonerees are publicly deemed “innocent,” many are expected to meet an impossible standard of resilience and advocacy. Innocence becomes equated with purity and perfection, and as a result, many exonerees edit and package their stories of pain into digestible narratives. Additionally, they are often expected to serve as benefactors within their communities, using financial settlements from the state to provide for others. In both their personal relationships and in the public sphere, many exonerees conceal the trauma of their experiences, which only compounds their isolation as they attempt to rebuild their lives. Central to my thesis is the question of what it means for exonerees to be seen as “perfect victims”—grateful for their release, forgiving of those who wronged them, and willing to use their suffering as a platform for reform. Through interviews with exonerees, lawyers, advocates, and journalists, this research delves into the social and emotional complexities of life after exoneration.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33042

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en

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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exoneration

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wrongful conviction

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restorative justice

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criminal justice

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media representation

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Imperfect Innocence: Navigating Public Scrutiny and Impossible Expectations after Exoneration

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Honors thesis

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