Safety•Exit
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Our Team
      • Board
      • Staff
      • Youth Organizing Fellows
    • Careers
  • What We Do
    • Investing in Young People
    • Advocacy & Organizing
    • Freedom Research Institute
  • Freedom 2030
  • Locations
    • Los Angeles
    • Oakland
    • San Francisco
    • Santa Clara County
  • Media
    • Young AF
    • Blog
    • YWFC Resources
    • In the News
    • Press Releases
    • Video Gallery
  • Contact
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Our Team
      • Board
      • Staff
      • Youth Organizing Fellows
    • Careers
  • What We Do
    • Investing in Young People
    • Advocacy & Organizing
    • Freedom Research Institute
  • Freedom 2030
  • Locations
    • Los Angeles
    • Oakland
    • San Francisco
    • Santa Clara County
  • Media
    • Young AF
    • Blog
    • YWFC Resources
    • In the News
    • Press Releases
    • Video Gallery
  • Contact
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Our Team
      • Board
      • Staff
      • Youth Organizing Fellows
    • Careers
  • What We Do
    • Investing in Young People
    • Advocacy & Organizing
    • Freedom Research Institute
  • Freedom 2030
  • Locations
    • Los Angeles
    • Oakland
    • San Francisco
    • Santa Clara County
  • Media
    • Young AF
    • Blog
    • YWFC Resources
    • In the News
    • Press Releases
    • Video Gallery
  • Contact
Safety•Exit←
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube

Freedom 2030

Sign the Charter Today!

#Freedom2030

Freedom 2030 is a ten-year campaign led by formerly incarcerated and systems-involved women, young women, and trans people of all genders toward ending the incarceration and criminalization of our families and communities, and replacing both with transformative justice processes and community-based alternatives.

To advance #Freedom2030, YWFC together with Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition and other partners are leading work in these areas:

  1. Deep investment in our people, family, and communities
  2. Ending family separation and promoting reunification
  3. Ending the profiting off of incarceration
  4. Ending enhancements and mandatory minimums
Read the Charter ⟶

Fill out the form below to endorse the Freedom 2030 Charter

A problem was detected in the following Form. Submitting it could result in errors. Please contact the site administrator.

You can help by Donating today.

Donate ⟶

#Freedom2030

What do you know about?
#FREEDOM2030
Find Out ⟶

General Info

  • Email Us
  • Call Us

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube
Locations
San Francisco

Headquarters
832 Folsom Street, Suite 700
San Francisco, CA 94107
sfreferrals [at] youngwomenfree.org
(415) 703-8800

Visit Us

Los Angeles

lareferrals [at] youngwomenfree.org
(415) 703-8800 ext 215

Visit Us

Oakland

oakreferrals [at] youngwomenfree.org
(510) 350-7411

Visit Us

Santa Clara County

sccreferrals [at] youngwomenfree.org
(415) 703-8800 ext 216

Visit Us

YWFC in the News

Solving Poverty in California Takes More Than Talk

June 23, 2022

Incarcerated Women Need A Place In Your Roe Outrage

June 16, 2022

With A Grand Opening in LA, YWFC Expands Its Efforts To Decarcerate Girls & Trans Youth

June 13, 2022

Get Updates

© Young Women's Freedom Center 2022 | Designed + Built by LDS

©Young Women's Freedom Center 2022
Designed + Built by LDS

FREEDOM2030 CHARTER

For the decriminalization and decarceration of cis and trans women and girls, and gender-expansive people, and (re)unification with our children and families.

The South African Freedom Charter was written in 1955 as a compass for the movement against racial apartheid. For 40 years it inspired the long-struggle to end apartheid, finally won in 1994. Inspired by this movement, we, as formerly and currently incarcerated and systems-involved cis and transgender women and girls and GNC people, have written and adopted our own Freedom Charter to guide our movement to end the mass incarceration and criminalization we experience and of our children, families and communities.

We, cis and trans women and girls, and gender-expansive people who are formerly and currently incarcerated, system-impacted, sexually exploited, declare to the United States and the world:

  • That the prison, policing, and family separation systems are rooted in histories of the colonization of indigenous people, slavery, Jim Crow laws, and continue to reflect racial apartheid in the United States;
  • That these and other public systems are designed to maintain this systemic inequality and that poverty is a key driver of incarceration, family separation, and recidivism;
  • That cis and trans women, girls, and gender-expansive people experience gender-based and sexual violence not only perpetuated by individuals but by these and other systems that are rooted in histories of slavery, colonization, patriarchy, homophobia and transphobia;
  • That we are punished for the ways we survive the abuse, violence, and exploitation we experience and the historical trauma and oppression of our families and communities;
  • That family separation is a continuation not the healing of these histories;
  • That our families and communities have been denied our humanity, basic human and civil rights, and healing;
  • That only a society based on equity, transformative justice, the recognition of full human rights, the protection of and access to basic needs for all – without discrimination based on race, gender, sexuality, class, immigration status, ability or age and that seeks to reverse intergenerational poverty and historic trauma – can call itself truly democratic and free, and realize liberty and justice for all.

And therefore we, cis and trans women, girls, and gender-expansive people who are formerly and currently incarcerated, systems-involved, and sexually exploited and our loved ones, families, communities, and allies adopt this Freedom Charter.

Those most impacted by incarceration and systems of criminalization and family separation are the rightful leaders of the movement to realize its goals.

We pledge to strive together until the decriminalization and decarceration of all cis and trans women, girls, and gender-expansive people and our loved ones and communities is achieved and our families – as we define them – are (re)united.

This includes securing the following rights:

  • We have the right to self-determination. We must determine what success looks like for ourselves. We have the right to lay our own paths free from punitive and controlling systems, and input and voice around all services impacting our lives.
  • We have the right to be free from sexual, gender-based and physical violence, abuse, and exploitation perpetrated by our families, partners, community, the State, and institutions. We have a right to defend ourselves from intimate, community, State, and institutional violence.
  • We have the right to make our own medical care decisions and to access quality medical care and on-demand preventative care for our physical, mental, emotional, dental, vision, and reproductive health.
  • We have a right to access cultural, holistic, and professional methods of healing to address the trauma we are exposed to while we are involved in the system and when we leave them. We have the right to access healing prior to coming into contact with systems and as a key to preventing systems-involvement. We should not be punished for our pain, exploitation, and trauma. We need healing, not punishment, when we self-medicate for our trauma and grief.
  • We have the right to be treated with dignity regardless of our legal or immigration status, past history of arrest or incarceration, or classifications given by the state or institutions.
  • We have the right to redeem ourselves to break the cycle of abuse and violence. We have the right to heal, to own and make amends for our mistakes, and the right to resources and support to seek transformation on our own terms. We claim the right to be free from discrimination based on our own or intergenerational histories of arrest and incarceration.
  • We have the right to economic opportunities. In order to escape cycles of poverty, exploitation, incarceration and abuse, we need employment and other economic opportunities that recognize our value, transferable skills, and dignity.
  • We have the right to be declared free from any debt to the justice system and to our confidentiality when we have completed our time. We should have equal pay for our labor while inside to comparable work on the outside.
  • We have the right to access education, knowledge, and technology while incarcerated, as we re-enter, and move through systems that will allow for us to keep up with the world we anticipate returning to post system-involvement.
  • We have a right to permanent, safe and affordable housing that does not feel like the institutions that have harmed us. We deserve homes where we can rest, be at ease and are safe, and where we can raise our children and build our families. We have a right to be part of deciding our placement within jails, prisons, transitional housing, foster care and/or group homes – including transferring to other facilities or placements.
  • We have the right to access (touch, hear, and see) our children, family, and loved ones when we are in the systems that criminalize and control us. We have a right to inform who cares for our children while we are unable to due to incarceration, houselessness, poverty, or other conditions. We have a right to get support and resources to stay connected to and reunite with our children as soon as we are able.
  • We have the right for our gender and sexuality to be respected and to be free from limiting conceptions of masculinity and femininity and the gender binary, to access hormone therapy and not have it withheld, to express our gender and sexuality while inside systems, on the streets and in our homes without fear of homophobic and transphobic discrimination, harassment and/or assault.
  • We have the right to be consulted when institutions want to create, revise and eliminate policies, legislation, rules or laws that will impact the way we experience systems. We are best positioned to identify alternatives to incarceration, criminalization, and family separation. We should have insight over the systems and institutions that most impact us.
Let me Sign⟶
  • Español