Advocacy Through Film and Education

Feature documentary and educational advocacy

Context

Survivor-centered perspectives are often absent from formal training in law enforcement, legal education, and justice-system operations. Narrative media can serve as a powerful tool for bridging this gap when used intentionally in educational and advocacy settings.

Advocacy Leadership

Kimberly wrote, produced, and directed the feature documentary Escaping Fed, using film as a vehicle for advocacy and education. Following festival recognition, she applied the film beyond traditional screenings, curating selected excerpts for use in policy discussions, academic settings, and professional education.

She delivered talks and facilitated discussions with criminal justice and legal studies audiences, using targeted clips to illustrate systemic barriers faced by victims from crime reporting through post-trial outcomes. The film was positioned as an instructional asset rather than entertainment, grounding procedural and ethical discussions in lived experience.

Impact

  • Recognition at three film festivals
  • Use of film excerpts in educational settings with criminal justice and legal studies students
  • Engagement with audiences preparing for careers in law enforcement and the justice system
  • Integration of survivor-informed narrative into policy, academic, and professional dialogue

Advocacy Outcome

The film functioned as a multi-use advocacy tool, supporting public education, professional reflection, and institutional dialogue around victim support and justice-system reform.