Advancement Project

[5] The Advancement Project National Office is known for its opposition to voter ID laws[6][7] and advocates for automatic voting rights restoration for all felons.

The Advancement Project National Office also advocates for an end to school disciplinary measures which it believes disproportionately put minority children into a school-to-prison pipeline.

The disparities were measured based on economic opportunity, healthcare access, education, housing, democracy, crime and justice, and environment.

[24] The organization also asked the state to invest in communities impacted by COVID-19 shelter-in-place orders based on children who do not have access to early education or child care.

[28] As of 2019, the board included Bill Lann Lee, Joe Alvarez, Arlene Holt Baker, Harry Belafonte, Stephen R. English, Rinku Sen, Helen Kim, Daniel Leon-Davis, Ash-Lee Henderson, Alberto Retana, Barrett S. Litt, Molly Munger, Katherine Peck, Constance L. Rice, Tom Unterman, and Jesse Williams.

Advancement Project Co-Director Judith Browne Dianis