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Poor people in the United States are a primary target for policing, especially those forced to live on the streets. But just how many people who are unhoused are caught up in the thousands of arrests made in cities each year? How many are criminalized for behaviors that stem directly from their extreme poverty? We combed through years of data from a variety of sources to answer these questions for the city of Atlanta.

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AI & Prosecution: Mapping the Current and Future Roles of Artificial Intelligence in Prosecution

This report—which relies on an extensive literature review and interviews with prosecutors around the country—begins to catalog current AI uses...

Police Robots: A Policy Framework

This is a policy framework for police use of robots, including ground robots and unmanned aerial vehicles (“UAVs”), also known...

ABORTION DECRIMINALIZATION IS PART OF THE LARGER STRUGGLE AGAINST POLICING AND CRIMINALIZATION

The expanding surveillance and criminalization of mutual aid, selfmanaged care, and bodily autonomy, and the growing attempts to criminalize pregnant...