Bold and Visionary: A Criminal Justice To-Do List for the New Administration

Biden and Harris have a mandate from the electorate to fight against mass incarceration, and it's past time to tackle this crisis.

Black and white protest sign reads: "No More Drug War, End Mass Incarceration"

Race-Conscious Policies—Including Affirmative Action—Are Necessary For Addressing Racial Inequity

Tiffani Burgess, (She/her/hers), Legal Fellow, ACLU Racial Justice Program

Affi

Andover Hall - Harvard Divinity School - Harvard University

The Biden Administration Can Make Us All Safer: End ICE Collaboration Programs

Naureen Shah, Senior Legislative Counsel and Advisor

Last

Enrique Balcazar, of Migrant Justice, an advocacy group representing immigrant farmworkers in Vermont, speaks to a crowd outside the federal court in Burlington, Vt.

The Questions You Probably THINK You Know the Answer to — But Likely Don’t — About ICE Detention

Hanna Johnson, She/her/hers, Communication Strategist , ACLU

Detainees walk past a map of the world in a hallway of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facility.

Can Liberals Win in a Conservative Court?

David Cole, ACLU Legal Director

This piec

U.S. President Donald Trump smiles as Judge Amy Coney Barrett is sworn in as the Supreme Court associate justice by Justice Clarence Thomas on South Lawn of White House.

New Court, New President: What’s Next for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties

As of now, we know the status of two of the three branches of the federal government. We have President-elect Joe Biden in the executive, and an even more conservative majority in the Supreme Court with the appointment of Justice Amy Coney Barrett. The future of Congress is still unknown as we await the results of two runoffs in Georgia that could hand control of the Senate to either party.

David Cole.

To Protect Black Trans Lives, Decriminalize Sex Work

Like pretty much everything in 2020, Trans Day of Remembrance is going to be different this year. It’s going virtual. But one thing that hasn’t changed is that transgender people are still being murdered for who we are. The list of names keeps growing. This year is the deadliest ever, and it isn’t even over yet. Thirty-seven trans people have been killed since January. The real number is probably even higher. Trans people are often misgendered by law enforcement or don’t report attacks, so we don’t even know about most of the violence that happens to our sisters. Most of the deaths this year were of Black trans women. Many were sex workers. I am not surprised. As a trans woman of color and a former sex worker myself, I know what it’s like to be targeted for who you are, and to not have anyone to call for help because your job is illegal.

Black trans woman with long hair against dark background

Trump’s Last-Ditch Census Move Could Shape the Electoral Map for the Next Decade

Dale Ho, Director, Voting Rights Project, ACLU

Trump’s day

A briefcase of a Census taker.

Remembrance, Resilience, and Response: Addressing An Epidemic of Violence Against Trans and Non-Binary People

Spencer Garcia, they/them/theirs, Paralegal, LGBTQ & HIV Project, ACLU

Each year on

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