Blog – Grid

The National Law Journal

The National Law Journal

The National Law Journal, a U.S. periodical founded in 1978 by Jerry Finkelstein, as a “sibling newspaper” of the New York Law Journal, that itself was founded in 1888. The National Law Journal reports legal information of national importance to ...
The Open File

The Open File

This website is the culmination of the work of an informal collection of lawyers, law professors, law students and policy advocates who are concerned about prosecutorial misconduct. We believe that too often, prosecutors – whose job it is to enforce the law – violate the laws and Constitution ...
The ProBono Project

The ProBono Project

The Pro Bono Project’s continuing mission is to provide free, quality civil legal services to the underserved members of our community. Our work today is as important as at any time in our thirty year history. The Pro Bono Project exists to ensure that all underserved citizens of six local ...
The Project on Race in Political Communication

The Project on Race in Political Communication

Launched in the summer of 2001 by Charlton McIlwain (New York University), a communication scholar, and Stephen Maynard Caliendo (North Central College), a political scientist, the Project on Race in Political Communication addresses a gap in systematic research on the ...
The Reagan Foundation

The Reagan Foundation

The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is the repository of presidential records from the administration of Ronald Reagan, 40th President of the United States, and the burial place of the President and First Lady, Nancy Reagan. It is the largest of the 13 federally operated ...
The Sentencing Project

The Sentencing Project

The Sentencing Project is a leader in changing the way Americans think about crime and punishment. The Sentencing Project has worked for a fair and effective U.S. criminal justice system for 30 years. Founded in 1986, The Sentencing Project works for a fair and effective U.S. criminal ...
The W. Haywood Burns Institute

The W. Haywood Burns Institute

The Burns Institute eliminates racial and ethnic disparity by building a community-centered response to youthful misbehavior that is equitable and restorative. We are a grassroots to grasstops organization. We believe innovation comes from the bottom and influences those at the top. That’s ...
Thousand Kites

Thousand Kites

Starting 1998, as host of the rural, Appalachian region’s only hip-hop radio program “Lights Out,” Thousand Kites founder Nick Szuberla received hundreds of letters from inmates recently transferred from distant cities into two new, local SuperMax prisons. The prisoners’ letters described ...