While the American workplace is often notoriously inhospitable to transgender Americans, the federal government last month moved decisively to change that. In a new memorandum, the Department of Justice explicitly clarified that gender identity discrimination claims are covered under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. This is another important step forward in the ongoing fight for basic fairness and equal treatment under the law for transgender Americans.
By By Ian S. Thompson, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
On January 11, 2002, the first prisoners were slammed into hastily assembled cages at the Guantánamo Navy base, and men then streamed in from across the globe. Typically brought into custody without even the most basic due process review, the newly arrived detainees included large numbers who had no reason to be in any prison, much less Guantánamo. Yet they were all now caught in a prison that one Bush official called "the legal equivalent of outer space" – a place where no laws were intended to apply.
By By Chris Anders, Senior Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
The tragic killing of teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, last August has brought much needed attention to the epidemic of racialized policing in America. In Ferguson and cities throughout the country, police stop, search, and arrest black people and other communities of color at rates grossly disproportionate to their population.
By By Nusrat Choudhury, Staff Attorney, ACLU Racial Justice Program
What happens when a prison for profit loses one of its main moneymakers?
By By Mike Brickner, ACLU of Ohio
Many people recognize the names Eric Garner, Michael Brown, and Tamir Rice, African-American men, and a child, killed by the police.
By By Susan Mizner, Disability Counsel, ACLU
Ada Morales, a long-time resident of Rhode Island, became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1995. Yet in 2009, when she was arrested by Rhode Island authorities for an unrelated state charge, Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued an immigration hold, or "detainer," against her. Explaining that an "investigation had been initiated" to determine her immigration status, ICE asked the Rhode Island authorities to keep her in jail even after her local custody ended.
By By Kate Desormeau, ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project
Wedding bells have begun ringing out across the Sunshine State.
By By James Esseks, Director, ACLU Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender & AIDS Project
This piece originally appeared in Spanish at El Nuevo Herald.
By By Juan del Hierro
Emily Herx never imagined that she could lose her job for trying to get pregnant. But after working for more than seven years as a literature and language arts teacher at a Catholic school in Indiana, she was shocked to learn that her teaching contract would not be renewed: All because the in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment she was undergoing in an attempt to have a second child made her a "grave, immoral sinner" in the eyes of her religious employers.
By By Brian Hauss, Legal Fellow, ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project
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