- Posted November 06, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
ACLU awarded $50M to end mass incarceration

The Open Society Foundations recently awarded a grant of $50 million to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in support of its nationwide campaign to end mass incarceration. The campaign seeks to reform criminal justice policies that have increased incarceration rates dramatically during a period of declining crime - and exacerbated racial disparities. The nation's adult jail and prison population numbers over 2.2 million with one in 100 adults behind bars, the highest incarceration rate in the world. The ACLU intends to cut that number in half by 2020, with the most ambitious effort to end mass incarceration in American history.
While the ACLU's most impactful work has typically been through litigation, this campaign signals a sea change for an organization with more than one million members and supporters, staffed state-based affiliates, and formidable legal muscle.
The ACLU will take the following immediate next steps:
- Bring transparency to the current crisis by assembling and disclosing state and local data around who is behind bars, for how long, and for what offenses
- Select 3 to 5 key states for the 2016 action - those with the largest prison populations, most egregious sentencing, and a history of playing a consequential role in the election of the next president
- Build state capacity in early primary and battleground states such as Florida, Iowa, New Hampshire, and Colorado
Published: Thu, Nov 06, 2014
headlines Jackson County
headlines National
- Wearable neurotech devices are becoming more prevalent; is the law behind the curve?
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- How will you celebrate Well-Being Week in Law?
- Judge rejects home confinement for ‘slots whisperer’ lawyer who spent nearly $9M in investor money
- Lawyer charged with stealing beer, trying to bite officer
- Likeness of man killed in road-rage incident gives impact statement at sentencing, thanks to AI