James
Fox, M.A., the founder and director of the Prison Yoga Project, is a
certified Hatha Yoga instructor with more than 20 years of yoga
experience. He has studied and taken teacher trainings in various
disciplines including Iyengar, Ashtanga and Taoist (Yin) Yoga. Upon
receiving his teaching credentials in 2000, in addition to offering
classes to the public, he began his mission of exposing at-risk
populations including the incarcerated to the psycho-physiological
benefits of Yoga.
James developed the Insight Prison Project's
Yoga Program at San Quentin Sate Prison and has been its coordinator and
principal teacher since its inception in September 2002. He has also
taught Yoga and mindfulness practices to youth-at-risk in juvenile
detention, at a residential treatment facility for boys, and for an
inner city, gang-related, community program. He created the Yoga
curriculum for the Peacebuilders Initiative, a weeklong, summer
intensive for teenage youth held annually in Chicago that he has taught
and directed since 2003. James has also provided training to Yoga
teachers interested in working with youth-at-risk through the Niroga
Institute, an organization that offers yoga classes to the Alameda
County Juvenile Justice Center as well as select Oakland and Berkeley
public schools.
James is specifically trained in the use of Hatha
Yoga for helping heal addictions, having studied with Fr. Joe Pereira,
senior Iyengar instructor and Director of the world renowned Kripa
Foundation, which operates over 30 addiction recovery centers throughout
India that use Yoga and meditation in their recovery programs. He is
also trained in violence prevention facilitation and conflict resolution
work.
In addition to directing the Yoga program at San Quentin,
James co-facilitates a group process class with prisoners for the
Insight Prison Project. He continues to teach public classes with an
emphasis on Yoga workshops for men.