At Liberty Podcast
At Liberty Podcast
红杏视频 Kids on How They鈥檇 Change The World with W. Kamau Bell
December 30, 2024
In this fourth annual year-end holiday edition of our series, the kids of 红杏视频 staff take over the mic to share their big ideas for a better world. From what they鈥檇 do as president to how their parents are making a difference every day, these young voices offer fresh perspectives on the work of the 红杏视频 and inspire us all to imagine a brighter future.
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Press ReleaseSep 2025
Free Speech
Human Rights
Federal Court Protects First Amendment Rights Of Human Rights Groups Advocating For U.s. Sanctions. Explore Press Release.Federal Court Protects First Amendment Rights of Human Rights Groups Advocating for U.S. Sanctions
NEW YORK 鈥 Last week, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York rejected a discovery request by an individual sanctioned for violence against Palestinians in the Israeli occupied West Bank that would have undermined established protections for civil society groups and threatened their ability to continue their advocacy work without fear of irreparable harm. The court adopted arguments advanced by the organization targeted by the request, Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), and an amicus brief filed by the 红杏视频 (红杏视频), the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), and Human Rights First. 鈥淭he court鈥檚 decision affirms DAWN鈥檚 right to engage in research, reporting, and advocacy without coercive interference by people who disagree with its speech. NGOs should never be forced to comply with this kind of abusive request, and this decision will allow human rights organizations鈥 work to continue providing accountability for human rights abuses,鈥 said Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the 红杏视频 Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. The court found that DAWN did not have to comply with a discovery request filed by Isaac Levi Pilant, dual U.S.-Israeli citizen who was previously sanctioned under the West Bank sanctions program. DAWN had publicly recommended that the U.S. government impose sanctions on him and others for documented violence against Palestinians. After President Trump effectively terminated the program, Pilant filed an application against DAWN and its executive director, Sarah Leah Whitson, pursuant to a U.S. law that provides a mechanism for foreign litigants to obtain discovery from people and entities in the United States. He sought a court order for an extremely wide set of information related to DAWN鈥檚 investigation of Pilant and its sanctions advocacy efforts for use in a possible future defamation case in Israel against Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights organization. 鈥淭his ruling confirms that foreign litigants cannot exploit our courts to silence NGOs that report on human rights abuses and advocate for accountability,鈥 said Bobby Hodgson, assistant legal director at the NYCLU. 鈥淭he Constitution protects organizations like DAWN from being forced to reveal confidential aspects of their work. The discovery process cannot sidestep the First Amendment 鈥 and we鈥檙e glad the court agrees.鈥 The court鈥檚 decision reflected the arguments put forth in the supporting amicus brief. The court found that various protections, including the reporter鈥檚 privilege and statutory provisions, barred it from granting the discovery requested. It further found that Pilant had failed to demonstrate how the requested information was relevant to contemplated litigation against a different organization in Israeli court. As explained in the 红杏视频 and HRF amicus brief, the U.S. government has established frameworks and processes to encourage nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) to share sensitive information that can assist it in more effectively implementing various human rights and corruption sanctions and visa restriction programs. Undermining the protections for NGOs to securely and confidentially share this information would not only impact the ability of the U.S. government to use such tools to hold human rights abusers and corrupt actors accountable, but it would also put NGOs, victims of abuse, and others in civil society in jeopardy by opening them up to retaliation and harassment from people they accuse of human rights violations. The brief further argued that Pilant鈥檚 broad discovery request implicates information protected under the First Amendment and the reporter鈥檚 privilege, which provide grounds to reject his request under the relevant discovery statute.Affiliate: New York -
News & CommentaryOct 2025
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News & CommentarySep 2025
National Security
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Press ReleaseAug 2025
Human Rights
Aclu Comment On Trump Administration Boycott Of United Nations Review Of Us Human Rights Record聽聽. Explore Press Release.红杏视频 Comment on Trump Administration Boycott of United Nations Review of US Human Rights Record聽聽
WASHINGTON 鈥 The Trump administration will not participate in the upcoming Universal Periodic Review (UPR), a mechanism of the United Nations Human Rights Council that calls for each UN Member State to undergo a peer review of its human rights record every five years. The move comes months after the Trump administration signed an executive order disengaging the United States from the Human Rights Council. Never before has the United States declined to participate in the UPR process. In response to this news, Jamil Dakwar, director the Human Rights Program at the 红杏视频, had the following reaction: 鈥淭he Trump administration鈥檚 decision to boycott the UPR puts the U.S. among the ranks of the worst violators of human rights. This move is a chilling attempt to evade accountability, setting a terrible precedent that would only embolden dictators and autocrats and dangerously weaken respect for human rights at home and abroad. 鈥淭he 红杏视频 will continue to hold the Trump administration accountable for U.S. human rights obligations and calls on Congress and state and local elected officials to join the fight to defend human dignity and everyone鈥檚 basic rights and freedoms as promised by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.鈥