Bio
Susan Mizner is Director Emeritus with the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program, after stepping down as Director in 2024. Ms. Mizner founded the Disability Rights Program in 2012, and for more than a decade the program has litigated cases, introduced and supported legislation, and coordinated with national and state ACLU offices on disability rights litigation and policy.
Prior to joining the ACLU, Ms. Mizner served for nine years as Director of the San Francisco Mayor’s Office on Disability, directing the City’s ADA Self-Evaluation and Transition Plan and working with the Mayor, Board of Supervisors, community organizations, and local citizens on disability rights issues. Ms. Mizner also worked for seven years as the coordinating attorney for the Bar Association of San Francisco’s Poverty and Disability Rights Project. After law school, Ms. Mizner received an Echoing Green Fellowship to advocate for homeless people with disabilities. She obtained her B.A. in Chemical Engineering and English from Yale University and her J.D. from Stanford University.
Featured work
Jul 8, 2022
Three Ways We're Fighting for Disability Rights in Courtrooms Across the Country
Oct 29, 2021
CVS Wants the Supreme Court to Gut Non-Discrimination Protections for People with Disabilities. It Could Set Us Back Decades.
Sep 16, 2021
Bans on School Mask Mandates Discriminate Against Disabled Kids
Sep 1, 2021
Seniors and People with Disabilities Want to Live in Our Homes, Not Nursing Homes. Will Congress Let Us?
Jun 23, 2020
COVID-19 Deaths in Nursing Homes are Not Unavoidable — They are the Result of Deadly Discrimination
Jan 14, 2020
The Offensive Hypocrisy of Banning Abortion for a Down Syndrome Diagnosis
Aug 13, 2019
Expanding Involuntary Confinement is Not the Answer to Solve Gun Violence
Nov 2, 2018
Children Cruelly Handcuffed Win Big Settlement Against the Police in Kentucky
May 10, 2018
Police ‘Command and Control’ Culture Is Often Lethal — Especially for People With Disabilities