The Constitution Project: Safeguarding Liberty, Justice and the Rule of Law
The Constitution Project (TCP) brings
together unlikely allies—experts and practitioners from across the political
spectrum—in order to promote and safeguard America’s founding charter. TCP is
working to reform the nation’s broken criminal justice system and to strengthen
the rule of law through scholarship, consensus policy reforms, advocacy, and
public education.
CORE ISSUES
The work of The Constitution Project (TCP) is centered on two
major program areas: criminal justice and the rule of law. The challenges and
threats to the integrity of our founding charter are the common thread woven
throughout these two programs.
Many of the issues we examine–our inability to provide
competent counsel to criminal defendants unable to afford lawyers; a death
penalty system that too often risks convicting the wrong people, including those
who are innocent; erosion of privacy rights and civil liberties in a post-9/11
world; and the indefinite detention without charge of terrorism suspects–are
front-page news. But many more of the issues we examine don’t receive the public
attention they deserve–protecting the rights of aid organizations whose lawful
work has been criminalized; seeking reform of sentencing laws that fail to
provide due process and are racially disproportionate; advocating that our laws
be updated to ensure that modern communications technologies are still covered
by constitutional safeguards; and scrutinizing the fallout of “tough on crime
and terrorism” policies.
On these and so many other constitutional issues, TCP and its
staff are compelled to act, whether the issue directly affects the rights of all
citizens or involves the rights of individuals on the margins of our society. We
accomplish our mission with the help of renowned experts and practitioners from
across the political and ideological spectrum who provide us with invaluable
guidance as members of TCP’s committees of experts, its diverse and
authoritative Boards of Directors and Policy Advisors, and the many law firms
and legal scholars who advise and support our work.
Reviewed in Association for College and Research Libraries Choice, September 2012
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