Racial Justice

The ACLU envisions a free, safe and just society, where civil liberties are secure for all. Throughout our history, we have worked to ensure that constitutional protections are extended to all and that opportunities for education, employment, legal representation, and political participation are not denied on the basis of race.

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Recognizing the insidious legacy of structural racism and how it undermines freedom and equality for all, the ACLU of Ohio explicitly centers racial justice in all areas of our work, internal and external. We understand the Bill of Rights to contain living, evolving principles, which can and must be made applicable to every individual regardless of race.

Racial justice work is intersectional by design – the fight for racial justice is inseparable from struggles for voting rights, LGBTQ+ rights, free speech, criminal legal system reform, and more.

Watch our Know Your Rights: Rights versus Reality video series where our panelists engage viewers in conversation surrounding the realities that Ohioans, particularly People of Color, can often experience when exercising their constitutionally protected rights with law enforcement.

The Latest

News & Commentary
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Black History Month through the Lens of Capital Punishment

Ohio elected officials have the opportunity to be bold, make history, and stand for racial justice. We know that the death penalty is ineffective, expensive, error-prone, and racially biased. Our inhumane capital punishment system does not belong in the future we dare to create.  
News & Commentary
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Honoring Black History Month Through the Lens of Public Safety

Together we can improve the lives of communities who have been the most frequent targets of police violence.
News & Commentary
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Highlighting Banned Books by Black Authors for Black History Month

For Black History Month, the ACLU of Ohio shares a list of ten books that have been banned in the U.S. by Black authors.
News & Commentary
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All Ohioans Can Live up to the Legacy of Black History Month – Here’s How

Late last year, the Economics Policy Institute Economic Analysis and Research Network (EARN) released a new report which made something glaringly obvious: Ohio still has a major racism problem. The evidence is there in many glaring ways – for instance, Ohio is in the top ten states with the largest ratio between black and white unemployment; Dayton and Cleveland are two of the six metropolitan areas in which poverty among the black population exceeds 40%; and like many Midwestern states, Ohio also imprisons African Americans at more than five times the rate of white individuals.Here’s the thing, if there is anything that we can do to honor the legacy of Black History Month, then we must do exactly what the Director of EARN, Naomi Walker, suggests – we must hold our policymakers accountable so they “recognize the economic harm that structural racism has caused Black families in all parts of the country. In a time of federal inaction, states must step up to address disparate economic outcomes by strengthening public education, bolstering workers’ rights and strengthening labor standards, and eliminating discrimination.”So you might ask: how do we hold our policymakers accountable?To start, we must elect lawmakers who are well aware of the impact of racist and classist policies and actively work against the grain of such. And the timing couldn’t be any better – 2020 is Election Year, and we can take advantage of this opportunity in just a few months!Then we can do more.We can also go beyond this in several ways – by actively holding our own leaders and authoritative figures in our workplaces and in the school system accountable when it comes to racial divides and discrimination, we can make changes in our everyday lives to combat this systemic racism.But then we must go a step further.Organizations such as the Tamir Rice Foundation, Black Lives Matter, Columbus Urban League,  Ohio Conference of the NAACP, the United Black Fund of Greater Cleveland, INC – and many more across the state of Ohio – need support in a variety of different capacities that many of us can fill in one way or another. Whether that means financial support, volunteering for events, or even just showing up and supporting these organizations and individuals involved with them, everything you do can make a difference.We must stop letting Ohio take the top ranks of perpetuating systemic racism.And we must also do it in a way that doesn’t make us “saviors,” but posits us to recognize how we’ve maintained this systemic oppression and how to actively dismantle the systems that have been advanced by the people who have been placed in authoritative roles by us.Only in this way can we live up to the legacy of Black History Month.And it is imperative that we should.We owe it to this beautiful state – and more importantly, we owe it to the individuals and communities that we are celebrating this month of February.
Court Case
Sep 11, 2023

State v. Raglin (amicus)

In Hamilton County cases where the death penalty is sought, a black defendant with at least one white victim is 5.33 times more likely than other defendants to be sentenced to death. The ACLU of Ohio submitted an amicus brief in support of removing the sentence and a new trial for Mr. Raglin.
Court Case
Dec 11, 2012

Boustani v. Husted

Court Case
May 21, 2003

In Re Cincinnati Policing 209 F.R.D. 395 (S.D. Ohio 2003)