opengreenhouseleadershipforeducationalequity
Fall 2027 Fellowship Sponsorship, National Prison Project
ACLU
LocationSan Francisco, California, United States; Washington, District of Columbia, United States, Washington, D.C. - National
Last observed2026-06-13 05:24:45.835706
Job idleadershipforeducationalequity-aclu:greenhouse:8562698002
ABOUT THE JOB The ACLU’s National Prison Project (NPP) invites rising third-year law students and recent law graduates to apply for sponsorship for an externally-funded fellowship such as Equal Justice Works, Justice Catalyst, or other public interest fellowships, to begin in the fall of 2027. This is a hybrid role that has in-office requirements of two (2) days per week or eight (8) days per month. Founded in 1972, NPP is the only organization that litigates carceral conditions cases on a national level. NPP works to ensure that our nation’s prisons, jails, juvenile facilities, and immigration detention centers comply with the Constitution, domestic law, and international human rights principles. Through litigation, public education, and other forms of advocacy, we fight to ensure that conditions of confinement are consistent with health, safety, and human dignity; to center the humanity of incarcerated people, their families, and their communities; and to reverse the laws and policies that give the U.S. the highest incarceration rate in the world. Our priorities include improving health care in prisons, eliminating violence and maltreatment, ending solitary confinement, defending the First Amendment rights of incarcerated people, and increasing oversight and accountability in prisons, jails, ICE detention, and other places of detention. We will review applications on a rolling basis, and priority consideration will be given to those who submit applications by June 19, 2026 . This position is part of a collective bargaining unit. It is represented by ACLU Staff United (ASU). WHAT YOU'LL DO Reporting to the Deputy Project Director , the Fellow will both work on existing cases and focus on their fellowship project to advance the body of law for incarcerated people. Our staff will work with candidates to develop their proposals to external funders for submission, helping tailor the proposal to address an important civil liberties issue for incarcerated people. Proposed projects often combine litigation and advocacy with community outreach and public education. NPP has identified the following as priority project proposal topics , but we are open to and would like to hear candidates’ alternative project ideas : Litigation and advocacy to move people with mental illness who have been found incompetent to stand trial out of jails. In our litigation against jails, all too often we find that those who are spending the longest periods of time in jail are people with serious mental illness who are either awaiting competency evaluation or have been found incompetent to stand trial. These people often cycle in and out of solitary confinement due to their poorly managed mental health care. This project would build on the work done by some ACLU affiliates in state and federal courts challenging the long-term incarceration of people in need of community mental health services through litigation, advocacy, and public education. Litigation and advocacy challenging carceral systems’ widespread and unregulated use of private transport companies to move incarcerated and detained people across the country and around the world. Every year, tens of thousands of people are packed into vans and buses operated by private companies hired to transport people who have been arrested, and in recent years, a pattern has emerged of people being abused, sexually assaulted, neglected, or dying while on multiple-day journeys across the country. According to a 2016 report , at that time corrections departments in 26 states relied upon private prisoner transport companies. Similarly, ICE is increasingly relying upon private aviation companies and third-party contractors to fly noncitizens across the United States between detention centers, and overseas on deportation and third-country removal flights. Immigrants report being shackled , including in restraints normally used only for people experiencing mental health crises, on flights lasting many hours. A 2023 De
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