Smart Justice

The ACLU Campaign for Smart Justice is an unprecedented, multiyear effort to reduce the U.S. jail and prison population by 50% and to challenge racism in the criminal legal system.

Smart Justice issue image

What you need to know

The world’s prison capital
The United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world, both per capita and by volume, making up close to five percent of the world's population yet more than 20 percent of the world's people in prison.
Racial disparities are 6 to 1
At the end of 2019, the imprisonment rate among Black men was nearly six times that of white men. And the rate for Black women was double that of white women.
$80 billion
The United States spends over $80 billion on incarceration each year.

What's at Stake

The United States is in the grip of a mass incarceration crisis that has devastated families, harmed communities, and deepened racial inequities in the criminal legal system and throughout the nation. The U.S. incarcerates more people, in both absolute numbers and per capita, than any other nation in the world.

The ACLU Campaign for Smart Justice is working in all 50 states and Washington DC for reforms to usher in a new era of justice in America. Since 2016, Smart Justice has played a leading role in the passage of more than 450 laws, which have resulted in tens of thousands of fewer people incarcerated. We have engaged in 45 district attorney races in 15 states–making more than 42 million voter contact attempts–lobbied more than 5,000 state lawmakers, placed more than 197,072 phone calls and sent more than 1 million texts, worked with more than 23,500 volunteers and 1,900 partner organizations, and led more than 288 lobby days in state capitols to push for reforms. Smart Justice is fighting every day in the legislatures, the courts, in the voting booth, and in the streets to end mass incarceration. We are particularly focused on:

  • Sentencing Reform: We must reduce both the number of people entering jails and prisons and the extreme laws and policies that drive extraordinary long prison terms.
  • Bail Reform: We’re overhauling harmful, unjust, and profit-seeking bail systems that needlessly lock up millions of people who haven’t been convicted of a crime just because they can’t afford to pay bail. We are pressuring equity and insurance companies to divest from the predatory for-profit bail industry.
  • Prosecutorial Reform: Prosecutors are the most powerful actors in the criminal legal system. For too long, they have made choices that perpetuate mass incarceration rather than tear it down. We’re challenging prosecutorial abuse through voter education and mobilization and in the courts and legislatures.
  • Parole and Release: Hundreds of thousands of people—including those convicted of violent and non-violent crimes—stay in prison for too long because of broken parole and release systems. We are overhauling these systems by challenging the plethora of conditions of release, including technical violations that often cause people to be returned to prison.
  • Re-entry: Each year, 650,000 people nationwide return from prison to their communities. Yet the challenges do not end once the prison bars are lifted. They face nearly 50,000 federal, state and local legal restrictions that make it difficult to reintegrate back into society.
  • Clemency: We are lobbying the president and governors to free 50,000 people by using their clemency powers in new and transformational ways, and specifically through the use of categorical clemency.
  • Policing: To bring an end to racist, violent policing and to empower communities of color to heal, repair the harms caused by policing, and build safe and thriving communities we must reduce the role, resources and power of police and invest in alternatives.

The United States is in the grip of a mass incarceration crisis that has devastated families, harmed communities, and deepened racial inequities in the criminal legal system and throughout the nation. The U.S. incarcerates more people, in both absolute numbers and per capita, than any other nation in the world.

The ACLU Campaign for Smart Justice is working in all 50 states and Washington DC for reforms to usher in a new era of justice in America. Since 2016, Smart Justice has played a leading role in the passage of more than 450 laws, which have resulted in tens of thousands of fewer people incarcerated. We have engaged in 45 district attorney races in 15 states–making more than 42 million voter contact attempts–lobbied more than 5,000 state lawmakers, placed more than 197,072 phone calls and sent more than 1 million texts, worked with more than 23,500 volunteers and 1,900 partner organizations, and led more than 288 lobby days in state capitols to push for reforms. Smart Justice is fighting every day in the legislatures, the courts, in the voting booth, and in the streets to end mass incarceration. We are particularly focused on:

  • Sentencing Reform: We must reduce both the number of people entering jails and prisons and the extreme laws and policies that drive extraordinary long prison terms.
  • Bail Reform: We’re overhauling harmful, unjust, and profit-seeking bail systems that needlessly lock up millions of people who haven’t been convicted of a crime just because they can’t afford to pay bail. We are pressuring equity and insurance companies to divest from the predatory for-profit bail industry.
  • Prosecutorial Reform: Prosecutors are the most powerful actors in the criminal legal system. For too long, they have made choices that perpetuate mass incarceration rather than tear it down. We’re challenging prosecutorial abuse through voter education and mobilization and in the courts and legislatures.
  • Parole and Release: Hundreds of thousands of people—including those convicted of violent and non-violent crimes—stay in prison for too long because of broken parole and release systems. We are overhauling these systems by challenging the plethora of conditions of release, including technical violations that often cause people to be returned to prison.
  • Re-entry: Each year, 650,000 people nationwide return from prison to their communities. Yet the challenges do not end once the prison bars are lifted. They face nearly 50,000 federal, state and local legal restrictions that make it difficult to reintegrate back into society.
  • Clemency: We are lobbying the president and governors to free 50,000 people by using their clemency powers in new and transformational ways, and specifically through the use of categorical clemency.
  • Policing: To bring an end to racist, violent policing and to empower communities of color to heal, repair the harms caused by policing, and build safe and thriving communities we must reduce the role, resources and power of police and invest in alternatives.
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