Weekly Round Up: June 8-June 12

Keeping Up with the General Assembly. We are heading into the final weeks of the 2015 legislative session, which means we are busier than ever here at the ACLU. Check out our frequently updated legislation page to see the status of important civil liberties-related bills and follow us on Twitter and Facebook to see last minute updates, breaking news, and calls to action.

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Celebrating Pride Month At The ACLU

By Johanna Kaiser, Development & Communications Associate

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Fighting for Journalists, Accountability, and Transparency

By Philip Eil, journalist and RI ACLU plaintiff

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Weekly Round Up: June 1-June 5

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1965: Griswold v Connecticut

By Johanna Kaiser, Development & Communications Associate

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RI Schools Over-Suspend Students With Disabilities, ACLU Report Finds

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Pregnancy Discrimination: How Much Has Really Changed?

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Community Organizations File Formal Petition To Amend Graduation Regulations

A coalition of 12 organizations representing youth, parents, the disability community, and civil rights activists today filed a formal petition with the state Council on Elementary and Secondary Education to initiate a public rule-making process to bar school districts from using high-stakes testing as a graduation requirement or grading tool before 2020.

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ACLU Challenges Century-Old Law Barring Some Inmates From Marrying

The ACLU of Rhode Island today filed a federal lawsuit to challenge the constitutionality of a 106-year-old statute that declares inmates serving life sentences at the ACI to be “civilly dead.” The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court by ACLU volunteer attorney Sonja Deyoe, is on behalf of two ACI inmates and the women who have been barred from marrying them because of the “civil death” law. Rhode Island apparently remains one of only three states that still has on the books a law like this, whose origins date back to ancient English common law.

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