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Reprieve Fellows are the frontline human rights defenders in the Reprieve team.
Reprieve Fellows are selected and funded by Reprieve to launch projects or take up positions defending poor people facing the death penalty, working as lawyers or investigators.
Fellows work on individual cases, saving individual lives, but also on projects that systematically challenge the gross injustices created by the death penalty system. For example, one Fellow is tacking the flaws in eyewitness identification procedures used by law enforcement in Texas; and another challenged racial imbalances in the composition of juries in Alabama. Fellows serve for 1-2 years.
For information on how you can become a Reprieve Fellow, click here
Click on a link below to read more about individual Reprieve Fellows:
- Sultana Noon, Reprieve Fellow, Pakistan
- Kate Black, Reprieve Fellow 2008-9
- Patrick Mulvaney, Reprieve Fellow 2008-9
- Frances Bourliot, Reprieve Fellow 2007-9
- Michael Moore, Reprieve Fellow 2007-8
- Christine DeMaso, Reprieve Fellow 2007 - 8
- Terrica Redfield, Reprieve Fellow 2006 - 7
- Alma Lagarda, Reprieve Fellow 2006 - 7
- Eleni Antonopoulos, Reprieve Fellow 2006 - 8
- Caroline Meyer, Reprieve Fellow 2005 - 6
- Barry Gerharz, Reprieve Fellow 2004 - 5
- Richard Bourke, Senior Fellow
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