Bio
Amy Fettig serves as the Deputy Director for the ACLU's National Prison Project (NPP). At NPP, she litigates federal class action prison conditions cases under the Eighth Amendment. Her practice focuses on claims regarding medical and mental health care in prison, solitary confinement, prison rape, and comprehensive reform in juvenile facilities. Ms. Fettig also directs the ACLU’s Stop Solitary campaign seeking to end the practice of long-term isolation in our nation’s prisons, jails and juvenile detention centers through public policy reform, legislation, litigation and public education. Ms. Fettig is a leading member of the national coalition seeking to end the practice of shackling pregnant women prisoners and works with a wide range of ACLU affiliates on both anti-shackling campaigns and their advocacy strategies around women’s health in prison. A national expert on prisoner rights law, she provides technical legal assistance and advice to advocacy groups and lawyers around the country and has served as an Adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center, where she teaches courses on public interest advocacy. Prior to law school, Ms. Fettig worked with women prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families in New York City. She holds a B.A., with distinction, Carleton College; a Master’s from Columbia University, School of International and Public Affairs; and a J.D. from Georgetown University. Ms. Fettig is a member of the New York State Bar (2002) and the Bar for the District of Columbia (2006).
Featured work
Dec 16, 2019
2019 was a Watershed Year in the Movement to Stop Solitary Confinement
Sep 19, 2018
New Bill Would Ensure No Woman Is Forced to Give Birth in Chains
May 25, 2018
The Trump Administration Is Attacking Trans People in Federal Prison
Feb 9, 2018
Arizona Needs Laws That Protect Women Prisoners’ Menstrual Health
Jan 10, 2017
James Burns Chose to Go Back Into Solitary Confinement for 30 Days, and He Livestreamed His Experience to Show the World Its Cruelty
Oct 1, 2015
Obama! There is No Time to Lose, Let’s End Solitary Confinement Once and For All
Jun 23, 2015
Justice Kennedy Says Make My Day on Solitary
Feb 9, 2015
This Prisoner's Note Isn't From Some Dystopian Dictatorship. It's From Texas.