About the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project (8/6/2004)
The Immigrants' Rights Project (IRP) of the American Civil Liberties Union works to defend the civil and constitutional rights of immigrants through a comprehensive program of impact litigation and public education. The IRP files constitutional and class action lawsuits protecting the historic guarantee to judicial review, enforcing fair employment practices and maintaining constitutional safeguards against detention practices and biased asylum adjudication. For ten years, the IRP has been at the forefront of every major legal struggle securing immigrants' rights; this role has become particularly crucial since the passage of two 1996 congressional acts implementing the most radical and draconian cutbacks to immigrants' rights ever.
The Immigrants' Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation was established in 1987 to expand and enforce the civil rights and civil liberties of non-citizens and to combat public and private discrimination against immigrants. From offices in New York and California, Immigrants' Rights Project attorneys litigate cases in federal courts throughout the country and provide legal support to advocacy organizations and community groups nationwide.
Defending the rights of immigrants was one of the founding principles of the ACLU; the Project carries on that historic commitment. The need to protect immigrants' rights has increased as immigrants have become scapegoats for myriad social and economic woes. In 1996, at the apogee of a level of virulent anti-immigrant hostility not seen since the turn of the century, Congress enacted new punitive, discriminatory and, at minimum, constitutionally flawed legislation that targeted the civil liberties and civil rights of newcomers and longtime legal resident immigrants alike. The Immigrants' Rights Project currently targets the following priority areas: unconstitutional restrictions on the right to judicial review; indefinite and mandatory detention of immigrants; post-9/11 policies and practices; local anti-immigrant ordinances; and public and private discriminatory practices targeting immigrants and immigrant workers. The IRP also supports ACLU affiliates' work to protect immigrants' rights and conducts a program of public education and advocacy.
Immigrants' Rights Project Staff
Lucas Guttentag -- Director, California and New York
Judy Rabinovitz -- Senior Staff Counsel, New York
Lee Gelernt -- Senior Staff Counsel, New York
Cecillia Wang -- Senior Staff Counsel, California
Mariana Bustamante -- Education Coordinator, California
Robin Goldfaden -- Staff Counsel, California
Omar Jadwat -- Staff Counsel, New York
Amrit Singh -- Staff Counsel, New York
Jennifer Changsha Chang -- Staff Counsel, California
Mónica M. Ramírez -- Staff Counsel, California
Eunice Lee -- Equal Justice Works Fellow, New York
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Pauline Nguyen -- Paralegal, New York
Katie Traverso -- Legal Assistant, New York
Ben Chandler -- Paralegal, California
Jessica Paz-Cedillos -- Paralegal, California
Contact Information
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
IMMIGRANTS' RIGHTS PROJECT
New York Office
125 Broad Street
New York, NY 10004-2400
Tel: 212-549-2660
Fax: 212-549-2654
California Office
39 Drumm Street
San Francisco, CA 94111
Tel: 415-343-0770
Fax: 415-395-0950
e-mail: immrights@aclu.org
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