“An abolitionist, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist organization”
A central tenet of the National Lawyers Guild Mass Defense Program is ensuring that we are not replicating the very same injustices we are fighting against. As all social justice organizations know, this is difficult work that must be done around the clock and in all aspects of the work that we do. It is absolutely necessary that all those who engage in movement work to continue to challenge these biases in themselves and the structures and spaces they create.
Additional Resources:
The following list of resources is by-no-means comprehensive. It is meant to serve as a starting point in a continuous journey of education and self-reflection.
Non-Paywalled Articles:
“Being an Ally/Building Solidarity” Core Organizing Tool (2019) by Southerners On New Grounds
Against Equality: Prisons Will Not Protect You – Introduction by Dean Spade (free scanned PDF; not plain text)
Books:
*Note: For books without a free PDF or website version, we’ve linked directly to a publisher or the author site for purchase. All authors listed have lived experience in the topic they’re writing about. To locate and request these books at your local library, please visit WorldCat.
Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity by C. Riley Snorton (Book/E-Book for purchase)
The Red Deal: Indigenous Action To Save Our Earth by The Red Nation (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge (Book/E-Book for purchase)
From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor (Book/E-Book for purchase)
We Too Sing America: South Asian, Arab, Muslim, and Sikh Immigrants Shape Our Multiracial Future by Deepa Iyer (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Asian American Feminisms and Women of Color Politics (Decolonizing Feminisms) edited by Lynn Fujiwara, Shireen Roshanravan, and Piya Chatterjee (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Who Do You Serve, Who Do You Protect?: Police Violence and Resistance in the United States edited by Maya Schenwar, Joe Macaré, Alana Yu-lan Price, foreword by Alicia Garza (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial Complex edited by Eric A. Stanley, Nat Smith, foreword by CeCe McDonald (Book/E-Book for purchase; free PDF here)
Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Trans Politics and the Limits of Law by Dean Spade (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Against Equality: Prisons Will Not Protect You edited by Ryan Conrad (Book/E-Book for purchase, free PDF and other online resources here)
Leslie Feinberg’s books and essays (website, free PDF download)
Know-Your-Rights for Protesters
Our updated Know Your Rights for Protesters booklet is a more comprehensive version of our classic pamphlet, with more information for protesters at higher risk of being targeted by law enforcement. This resource is best to use in advance of an action or demonstration, to give you the kinds of information that will help you know your rights and risks. Because it is much longer than the original version, it may take longer to read.
General Know-Your-Rights Info

Know Your Rights booklets are available online for in English, Spanish, Arabic, Bengali, and Urdu. PDFs of these booklets are available for free download and hard copies are available to order at nlg.org/store.
Know Your Rights During COVID-19: In response to COVID-19, numerous public health and national security measures are being proposed and implemented across the nation. While necessary to protect our communities and health care systems, we must be vigilant and resist authoritarian and violent tendencies by the state.
As an abolitionist, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist organization, the National Lawyers Guild recognizes that the constitutional civil liberties framework is deeply flawed, intended to uphold capitalism, and enforced inconsistently. Historically, states of emergency, mandatory quarantines, and curfews have often been used to expand state control over political and civil freedom. Emergency powers often criminalize movement, freedom of expression, protest, and marginalized communities. Nevertheless, it is important that we know what rights exist to protect ourselves and resist increased policing.
Federal Repression Resources


The Center for Constitutional Rights created If An Agent Knocks, a resource guide with advice for activists likely to be targeted by FBI agents or other federal investigators. The guide is available in PDF form in the following languages: English | Spanish | Urdu | Arabic
Resisting Grand Juries: The Civil Liberties Defense Center has created a comprehensive PowerPoint with an overview of how grand juries work. In addition, Katya Komisaruk has written an informational guide titled, “What You Should Know About Grand Juries“.
The Grand Jury Resistance Project has a list of educational resources on grand juries. Click on the button below for more information.
Federal Repression Webinar: This video (above) is a discussion of current and historical federal harassment of both activists and lawyers working for social change; the unmet needs of both activists and lawyers in many parts of the US and how legal workers can bridge the gaps; and both ethical and practical advice on shielding your clients and yourself from state repression, including how to advise and litigate on behalf of clients to challenge the legitimacy of grand jury subpoenas. It is presented by NLG-NYC and the NLG National Office.
Additional Legal Information Resources
The Movement for Black Lives has several legal resources. Click on the buttons below to find out more!

The Tilted Scales Collective has written A Tilted Guild to Being a Defendant, a guide which “aims to educate and empower activists ensnared in the criminal legal system by providing practical guidance on how defendants can navigate and confront the system without compromising their activism.”
“As organizers, we need to think of access with an understanding of disability justice, moving away from an equality-based model of sameness and “we are just like you” to a model of disability that embraces difference, confronts privilege and challenges what is considered “normal” on every front. We don’t want to simply join the ranks of the privileged; we want to dismantle those ranks and the systems that maintain them.”
-Mia Mingus
Non-Paywalled Articles:
Changing the Framework: Disability Justice – How our communities can move beyond access to wholeness by Mia Mingus
10 Principles of Disability Justice by Sins Invalid
The Revolution Must Be Accessible by HEARD
10 Ways We Can Make Leadership Accessible for Sick Folks in Activism by Katie Tastrom
Free Accessibility Audit Template by Radical Accessibility Mapping Project
How to Make Your Social Justice Events Accessible to the Disability Community: A Checklist by S.E. Smith
A Legal Guide For Activists With Physical Disabilities and Health Issues by the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP) (Please note: This guide was created by Canadian activists, and exact legal policies may vary.)
Disability Visibility Project curated by Alice Wong (website)
A Planning Guide for Making Temporary Events Accessible to People With Disabilities by ADA National Network
20 Tips for a More Accessible Event by Shawna McKinley
Planning Accessible Meetings and Events: A Toolkit by the American Bar Association
Books:
*Note: For books without a free PDF or website version, we’ve linked directly to a publisher or the author site for purchase. All authors listed have lived experience in the topic they’re writing about. To locate and request these books at your local library, please visit WorldCat.
Don’t Leave Your Friends Behind: Concrete Ways to Support Families in Social Justice Movements and Communities edited by Victoria Law and China Martens (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During This Crisis (and the Next) by Dean Spade (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Disability Politics and Theory by A.J. Withers (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-First Century edited by Alice Wong (Book/E-Book for purchase)
Disability Incarcerated: Imprisonment and Disability in the United States and Canada edited by Liat Ben-Moshe and Allison C. Carey, foreword by Angela Davis (Book/E-Book for purchase; local library availability listing)
Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition by Liat Ben-Moshe (Book/E-Book for purchase)
NLG Disability Justice Committee:
The Disability Justice Committee works to transform systems that privilege some types of body-minds over others. We bring disability perspective to social justice work. We support leadership of queer women, trans people, and people of color with disabilities. The DJC is also a way for lawyers, legal workers, and prisoners living with all kinds of disabilities to support each other. Their contact is djc@nlg.org. See the Disability Resources list created by the committee!
The Assault on Free Speech, Public Assembly, and Dissent (2004)
Punishing Protest (2007)
The Policing of Political Speech (2010)
Operation Backfire, on how the government targets environmental and animal rights activists as domestic terrorist threats.
For more on movements and state repression, visit the NLG Blog.



Photo Credit: (Left to Right) “BlackLivesMatter-George Floyd. Portland’s Epicenter. The Apple Store. June 14, 2020” by drburtoni is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0. “Charlottesville ‘Unite the Right’ Rally” by Anthony Crider is licensed under CC BY 2.0. Minneapolis Police fire tear gas at those protesting the May 25th death of George Floyd. Chad Davis is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
For further assistance, contact our Mass Defense Program here: massdef@nlg.org You can also click on the button below to find NLG attorneys who provide criminal representation for activists arrested during protests.