Bio
Allison Frankel is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU’s Criminal Law Reform Project (CLRP). She previously served as an Equal Justice Works Fellow with CLRP and the ACLU’s Human Rights Program, and as the Aryeh Neier Fellow with the ACLU and Human Rights Watch, where she authored a report, Revoked: How Probation and Parole Feed Mass Incarceration in the United States. Prior to joining the ACLU, Allison challenged unlawful restrictions on sex-offense registrants as a fellow with the Center for Appellate Litigation, and served as a law clerk to the Honorable Andrew L. Carter, Jr. of the Southern District of New York. Allison is a graduate of Yale Law School and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Featured work
Jul 25, 2012
U.S. Military Treatment of Juvenile Detainees Undergoes International Scrutiny
Jul 6, 2012
Death Penalty Abolition Movement “To See Sunny Days”
Jun 20, 2012
U.S. Targeted Killings Program: A Dangerous Precedent
Jun 19, 2012
Calls for Greater Transparency and Accountability for Targeted Killings at U.N. Human Rights Council