Bio
David C. Fathi is Director of the American Civil Liberties Union National Prison Project, which brings challenges to conditions of confinement in prisons, jails, and other detention facilities, and works to end the policies that have given the United States the highest incarceration rate in the world. He worked as a staff lawyer at the Project for more than ten years before becoming director in 2010, and has special expertise in challenging “supermax” prisons, where prisoners are held for months or years at a time in conditions of near-total isolation. From 2012 to 2015 he represented the ACLU in negotiations leading to adoption of the United Nations Revised Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, known as the “Nelson Mandela Rules.”
From 2007 to 2010 Fathi was Director of the US Program at Human Rights Watch. The US Program works to defend the rights of particularly vulnerable groups in the United States, and has published groundbreaking reports on the death penalty, prison conditions, racial discrimination, the rights of immigrants, and many other human rights issues.
Fathi has lectured nationally and internationally on criminal justice issues. His op-eds have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Houston Chronicle, and other major media outlets. He is a graduate of the University of Washington and the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley. He lives in Washington, DC.
Featured work
Sep 26, 2022
50 Years of Fighting for the Rights of Incarcerated People
Apr 4, 2019
New Images From an Alabama Prison Reveal Horrific Conditions and Abuse
Nov 15, 2018
Prisoners Are Getting Paid $1.45 a Day to Fight the California Wildfires
Sep 14, 2018
‘Attica Is Every Prison; and Every Prison Is Attica’
Jan 11, 2018
How Poor Health Care Turned Walter Jordan’s Prison Sentence Into a Death Sentence
May 27, 2015
Victory! UN Crime Commission Approves Mandela Rules on Treatment of Prisoners
Apr 3, 2015
Everything That Is Wrong With U.S. Prisons in One Picture
Mar 2, 2015
Will Nelson Mandela's Solitary Confinement Inspire Positive Change?
Feb 14, 2013
Three Questions Senator Durbin and the DOJ Need to Ask about Federal Solitary
Dec 18, 2012
UN Prisoners’ Rights Meeting: US Puts the Brakes on Progress