Marc Schindler to Join the Center for Youth Justice
Posted in Announcements News
The Center for Youth Justice (CYJ) is delighted to announce that in January 2026, Marc Schindler will be joining our team as a Research Professor of the Practice and Senior Fellow. Marc is one of this country’s most preeminent and well-respected leaders in the youth justice field. For over 35 years, he has worked on behalf of young people in a variety of leadership roles, including as a youth justice administrator, non-profit executive director, attorney, advocate, and partner at a philanthropic fund.
“Marc brings energy, wide ranging experience and vast knowledge of the youth justice field from a number of perspectives,” said Michael Umpierre, Director of CYJ. “Most importantly, he has the passion, expertise and drive needed to positively impact today’s justice system. His commitment to the work inspires others to the need for real change to better serve youth and families impacted by the justice system.”
At CYJ, Marc will lead a new initiative–Forgotten Children: Unearthing the Lives Behind the Lost Burial Sites of Incarcerated Youth–designed to restore dignity to forgotten incarcerated youth buried in unmarked graves across the US. The project will use history to advance racial justice and youth justice reform, and contribute to a national movement to recognize and atone for such histories across the country. Amid current efforts to erase and ignore African American history, the work to preserve and share the stories of incarcerated children who were buried and forgotten, particularly youth of color, is more urgent than ever. Marc will also support several other CYJ initiatives, including the Public Information Officers Learning Collaborative and the Transforming Juvenile Probation Certificate Program.
Most recently, Marc served as the Assistant Secretary and Chief of Staff for the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services, the cabinet-level youth justice agency in the state of Maryland, where he worked to shape the system in line with a more developmental and community-centered approach. More than twenty years prior to serving in this role, Marc was one of the key leaders of the reforms to the Washington, DC youth justice system, where he served as Interim Director, Chief of Staff, and General Counsel for the District’s Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services (DYRS). With Marc’s leadership, DYRS transformed from a punitive model of juvenile corrections to a model based on positive youth development. During his tenure at DYRS the agency’s reforms were recognized by Harvard’s Kennedy School, naming the department one of the “Top 50” government programs in 2008 in its prestigious Innovations in American Government Awards competition.
A lawyer by background, Marc has worked as a public defender representing children in Baltimore and as an attorney at the Youth Law Center, a national civil rights law firm working on behalf of children in youth justice and child welfare systems across the country. Marc has also served in leadership positions in the non-profit sector, including for a decade as Executive Director of the Justice Policy Institute, and in the philanthropic sector, including as a Partner at Venture Philanthropy Partners, where he directed efforts to support youth-serving nonprofit organizations in the national capital region. Marc is an expert on youth justice matters and has previously served as an Adjunct Professor at George Washington University and at American University’s law school. He has also authored or co-authored more than twenty-five published research reports or papers. He has a B.A. in Political Science from Yale University, and a J.D. from the University of Maryland School of Law. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife and is the proud father of two college aged children.
“I’m thrilled to be joining the Center for Youth Justice,” said Schindler, who has worked closely with CYJ in his various roles over the years. “CYJ is one of the country’s leading research and practice organizations, working to effectively support youth justice practitioners throughout the country. I am honored to be joining such a talented, hard-working staff at one of the premier institutions of higher learning.”
Marc’s new contact information at CYJ will be available in January. Those wishing to reach out to Marc before then, or learn more about the Forgotten Children Initiative, can email centerforyouthjustice@georgetown.edu.


