Racial Justice

The ACLU works to stop discrimination based on race and ethnicity and to ensure equal opportunities for communities of color. We fight racial bias and advance civil rights.

end racial profiling now

What you need to know

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Black students are suspended and expelled from school three times more often than white students are.

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The median wealth of white households is 20 times that of black households and 18 times that of Latino households.

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Black inmates are three times more likely to face the death penalty than whites.

The ACLU of Oregon strives to end the disproportionate impact of police abuses, over-incarceration, and the selective enforcement of drug laws on communities of color.

By Police
Good police practices, thorough training, carefully crafted policies, and appropriate allocation of resources in law enforcement, can ensure public safety and prevent abuses in encounters between police officers and citizens. Unfortunately, across the nation patterns of racial profiling, the selective enforcement of laws against people of color, and disturbing stop-and-frisk policies have resulted in a disproportionate effect on certain communities, with people of color coming in contact with law enforcement and the criminal justice system at far greater rates than white people.

In Prison
More Americans are deprived of their liberty than ever before—unfairly and unnecessarily, with no benefit to public safety. It’s a problem that affects people of color most of all. As more people find themselves locked up, more people face the culture of violence and inhumanity that persists in many of America’s prisons. Excessively harsh criminal justice policies result in mass incarceration and stand in the way of a just and equal society.

In Schools
The “school-to-prison pipeline” refers to the policies and practices that push our schoolchildren, especially those most at-risk, out of classrooms and into the juvenile and criminal justice systems. Despite significant strides in Texas, our schools continue to rely heavily on ticketing as a form of discipline and disproportionately punish children of color and special needs kids.

The Latest

News & Commentary
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#BlackLivesMatter Tracked by Oregon DOJ with Social Media Monitoring Software

An explainer on the booming industry to covertly monitor, track, and analyze social media data.
News & Commentary
Group of marchers at “We Are The Bridge: Rise for Racial Justice.”

Honor George Floyd's Memory By Working Towards Police Accountability

On Saturday, May 24, 2025, the ACLU of Oregon participated in a rally in Portland called “We Are The Bridge: Rise for Racial Justice.”
News & Commentary
A mural with the image of George Floyd ihas flowers and signs protesting his murder lay beneath it five years later.

Five Years After George Floyd, the Fight for Police Accountability Isn't Over

As Donald Trump tries to limit efforts to combat police brutality, the ACLU’s Seven States Safety Campaign shows how communities are stepping up to demand justice.
News & Commentary
Group of rally attendees at Portland Waterfront

We can resist fascists, and we can win!

On Saturday, April 5, 2025, millions of people across the United States took to our streets to protest for our democracy. An estimated 10,000 people showed up in downtown Portland, where ACLU of Oregon’s Executive Director Sandy Chung spoke.
Court Case
Jun 04, 2024

Betschart v. State of Oregon

Court Case
Aug 18, 2023

State of Oregon v. Izzy Guajardo-McClinton

Court Case
Jan 24, 2022

Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides et al v U.S. Department of Homeland Security

The ACLU of Oregon filed an appeal with the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit challenging DHS’s use of chemical munitions during the 2020 racial justice protests, in violation of environmental law.
Court Case
Dec 10, 2021

Tovar Hernandez v. United States; NORCOR; Washington County