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HOW THE ACLU WORKS
The ACLU has approximately 2,000 attorneys--66 paid staff members,
the rest volunteers--handling about 6,000 cases annually, making it
the largest private law firm in the country. Indeed, the ACLU appears
before the U.S. Supreme Court more often than any other organization
except the U.S. Justice Department.
The ACLU is made up of a network of 51 state affiliates and hundreds
of local chapters guided and coordinated by a national office in New
York. The organization also has a legislative office in Washington,
DC that handles congressional lobbying, and regional offices in Atlanta
and Denver. The ACLU has special national projects devoted to specific
civil liberties issues: the Reproductive Freedom Project, the Lesbian
and Gay Rights Project, the AIDS and Civil Liberties Project, the
National Prison Project, the National Security Project, the Children's
Rights Project, the Capital Punishment Project, the Privacy and Technology
Project, and the Immigration and Aliens' Rights Task Force.
"So long as we have enough people in this country willing
to fight for their rights, we'll be called a democracy."-ACLU
Founder Roger Baldwin
The ACLU is governed by an 81-member Board of Directors which has
one representative from each state affiliate and 30 at-large members
elected by the affiliate and national boards. The affiliate boards,
in turn, are elected by all ACLU members within the state. On a day-to-day
basis, each affiliate is autonomous and makes its own decisions about
which cases it will take and which issues it will emphasize. All collaborate
regularly with the national ACLU in carrying out common goals.
These goals are scheduled in a 430-page policy guide that is continually
revised by committees of the national Board. In an emergency, decisions
are made by the Board's Executive Committee.
THE FINANCIAL PICTURE
The ACLU depends exclusively on contributions from its 275,000 dues-paying
members and grants from foundations and individuals for its support.
The ACLU does not receive and would not accept government funding.
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