U.S. Felon Disfranchisement Laws and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
The felony disfranchisement laws, policies and practices of the United States violate the right to vote free from discrimination under the American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man and the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights.
The ACLU has twice brought the issue of U.S. felon disfranchisement laws before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR); once in a contentious petition challenging New Jersey’s disfranchisement laws and more recently, in the form of a request to the IACHR to convene a hearing on disfranchisement laws in the United States and other countries in the Americas.
The IACHR is an autonomous body of the Organization of American States (OAS), an inter-governmental organization of which the United States is an active member. As a member of the OAS, the United States is obligated to uphold human rights recognized under the American Declaration and Inter-American Convention on Human Rights. The IACHR is tasked with monitoring and enforcing member state compliance with these human rights standards. With headquarters in Washington, D.C., the Commission regularly investigates allegations of human rights violations in the Americas
In September 2006, a petition alleging violations of the human rights – specifically the right to vote and the right to vote free of discrimination - of the New Jersey State Conference NAACP, the Latino Leadership Alliance of New Jersey, Councilwoman Patricia Perkins-Auguste, Councilman Carlose J. Alma, Stacey Kindt, Michael Mackason, Charles Thomas, and Dana Thompson by the USA and the State of New Jersey, was submitted to the IACHR. This filing was followed by a request to the Commission to hold a thematic hearing on the discriminatory effects of felony disfranchisement laws, policies and practices in the Americas. This request was submitted in September 2009.
> Learn more about "Right to Vote" the ACLU's campaign to end felony disfranchisement.

