Rights for All Will Put Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Front and Center in the 2020 Presidential Race

Jose Ivan Parga is a member of a multi-status, Mexican-immigrant family in Minnesota. Even though he is a citizen, every day he witnesses the fear and uncertainty that his extended family has because of their immigration status. For decades they have worked, worshiped, and raised families in the state. Yet at any moment, immigration agents could — and have — detained a member of his family without warning or cause, despite their deep roots in the community. With no clear path to citizenship, Jose Ivan’s family is forced to live in the shadows of a broken immigration system.

Rights for All - ACLU

When Taking a Walk at Night Was an Act of Civil Disobedience

Seventy-six years ago, Minoru “Min” Yasui sat in a cell at the Multnomah County Jail in Oregon when he read a newspaper article detailing how Walter Pierce, the state’s former governor and U.S. congressman, called for Japanese immigrants in the United States to be sent to Japan. Ever the racist and xenophobe, Pierce wasn’t done. He even suggested revoking birthright citizenship for Americans of Japanese descent.

Gordon Hirabayashi, Minoru Yasui, and Fred Korematsu

Why School Psychologists Are Worried About the Mental Health of America’s Students

Earlier this month, thousands of school psychologists met in Atlanta at the annual convention of the National Association of School Psychologists. One of the hottest topics among attendees was exhaustion — a consequence of having to serve more students who are experiencing more trauma and other mental health problems without more help in carrying the load.

Distressed student sitting with a counselor

Kirstjen Nielsen Continues to Insist That There Is No Family Separation Policy

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen testified on Wednesday before the House Committee on Homeland Security, just days after the House passed a resolution to overturn President Trump’s emergency declaration on the border wall.  

Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen M. Nielsen near the border fence at Border Field State Park

Student Surveillance Versus Gun Control: The School Safety Discussion We Aren’t Having

On April 20, 1999, two male students walked into Columbine High School and started shooting. By the time it was over, 15 students were dead and 24 more had been injured. America had changed forever. But in some ways, it hasn’t changed at all.

Surveillance camera mounted in front of a school yard

Rampant Abuses in Immigration Detention Prove ICE Is Rotten to the Core

Last Friday, a Honduran asylum seeker suffered an unthinkable tragedy when she had a stillbirth while in ICE detention in Texas. While the facts of this case are still coming to light, it is only one of many tragic incidents involving immigrants detained by the federal government in recent months.

Detention Center

South Carolina's Prison Profile

The Prison Policy Initiative has done an analysis of every state's prison system to determine where each state stands compared to the world. South Carolina's position? Shocking.

Placeholder image

It’s Time to Make Sure Our Kids Are No Longer Bound, Shackled, or Locked Away When They’re at School

In 1998, teachers in West Virginia strapped a 4-year-old autistic girl with cerebral palsy to a wooden chair. Why? She was being “uncooperative” because she needed to use the bathroom. The girl suffered bruises and was later diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Kid Handcuffs

The Supreme Court Rightly Cited the Black Codes in Ruling Against Excessive Fines, Fees, and Forfeitures

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a rare unanimous ruling in Timbs v. Indiana, holding for the first time that the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause applies to state and local governments — not just federal authorities. 

Line outside Supreme Court