Alison Leal Parker
Alison Leal Parker, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's US Program, helps to guide Human Rights Watch’s work on domestic human rights issues in the United States, with an overarching focus on racial justice and within that US immigration and border policy as well as US democracy. From 2001-2002, she served as a Sandler fellow and the organization's director of refugee policy, in both positions documenting and advocating against violations of the rights of refugees around the world.
Parker has conducted human rights investigations in prisons, jails, immigration detention centers, and immigrant communities throughout the United States as well as in refugee settings in Africa and Central Asia. She has conducted extensive advocacy before the governments of the United States and Europe; has testified before state legislatures and the US Congress; and is a frequent voice in the media. Parker has edited and authored numerous Human Rights Watch reports, including a landmark examination of the sentencing of children to life without the possibility of parole, which was subsequently cited in two U.S. Supreme Court decisions limiting the practice. She also sits on the Board of Directors for the Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth.
A graduate of the University of California, Berkeley and Oxford University, Parker holds a master’s degree from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs, and a JD from Columbia Law School. Prior to joining HRW, she worked with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the Jesuit Refugee Service, and engaged in sovereign litigation as an attorney at Cleary Gottlieb Steen and Hamilton in New York.
Articles Authored
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September 11, 2024
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February 7, 2024
A Human Rights Guide to the 2024 US Elections
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April 26, 2023
Operation Lone Star is Drug War Déjà Vu
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October 7, 2022
Grim Anniversary of Boy’s Killing by CBP Should Prompt Reforms
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March 18, 2021
Will US Repeat History by Failing Haitians Again?
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February 10, 2020
The US Deported Them, Ignoring Their Pleas. Then They Were Killed.
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April 19, 2018
US Supreme Court Ends Vague Basis for Deportation
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February 2, 2017
Hundreds of Thousands of Constituents Will be Affected by Ban
Other Writing
Reports Authored
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Against All Odds
Prison Conditions for Youth Offenders Serving Life without Parole Sentences in the United States
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A Costly Move
Far and Frequent Transfers Impede Hearings for Immigrant Detainees in the United States
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Executive Summary: The Rest of Their Lives
Life without Parole for Youth Offenders in the United States in 2008
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Submission to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
During its Consideration of the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Periodic Reports of the United States of America
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