Upgrades to the Restoration of Rights Project
We are pleased to announce the completion of a major project to upgrade our flagship resource, the Restoration of Rights Project (RRP). The RRP is a free on-line compendium of legal research that describes and analyzes the laws and practices relating to criminal record relief in the United States. The improvements we have made will make it easier for our readers to gain both a snapshot and more detailed understanding of how record relief laws and policies operate within each of the 50 states, D.C., 2 territories, and the federal system. They will also facilitate comparisons of how different states address various types of relief, producing a national-level picture against which each state can measure its progress.
This major undertaking was a collaboration between CCRC staff and four students at Yale Law School: Jordan Dannenberg, Kallie Klein, Jackson Skeen, and Tor Tarantola. We thank these students, as well as YLS Professor Kate Stith, for their excellent contributions to our mission of promoting public engagement on the issues raised by the collateral consequences of arrest or conviction.
The state-by-state profiles, summaries and 50-state comparison charts from the RRP are what we rely on in preparing periodic and year-end summary reports on new legislation, which we track and add to the RRP in real time throughout the year. The research and analysis in the RRP also informs our commentary on everything from new court decisions and scholarship to politics and practice, as well as the amicus briefs we file from time to time in significant litigation. It is the foundation of our work on model legislation. The RRP provided the raw material for a national overview report of record relief laws and policies, Forgiving and Forgetting in American Justice, which was last revised in August 2018. Because of this report’s value in identifying overall patterns and emerging trends, we are already at work bringing it up to date with the more than 200 new laws passed since it was last revised.
Through the upgrade project we reorganized and expanded the RRP in three major ways.