Attorney, author and Center
for Constitutional Rights (CCR) President Michael Ratner
is the recipient of the 2007 Puffin/Nation Prize for Creative
Citizenship. One of the country's foremost defenders of
human rights and civil liberties, Ratner has led the fight
to demand due process for Guantánamo detainees, adequate
safeguards against intrusive government surveillance, and
an end to torture and extraordinary rendition. Ratner will
receive the annual prize on December 10 at The Nation Institute
Annual Dinner Gala in New York City, the same week CCR returns
to the Supreme Court representing Guantánamo detainees
held indefinitely without charges.
Under Michael Ratner’s leadership, the Center for
Constitutional Rights has repeatedly challenged the Bush
administration on the constitutionality of indefinite detention
and restrictions on domestic civil liberties. On December
5, Mr. Ratner and co-counsel will return to the Supreme
Court with the combined cases of Al
Odah v. U.S. and Boumediene
v. Bush. These cases are the first to directly challenge
the constitutionality of the Military Commissions Act of
2006 and its stripping of habeas corpus jurisdiction from
federal courts.
“Michael Ratner has pushed the courts and the legislature
to defend the rights of citizens and non-citizens alike
by protecting the rule of law,” said Perry Rosenstein,
President of the Puffin
Foundation, Ltd., the co-sponsor of the Creative Citizenship
award. “The Puffin/Nation Prize is about more than
a job well done. This award recognizes an individual whose
lifelong commitment to social change has led to a true expansion
of the rights and privileges we all enjoy. Mr. Ratner’s
work certainly deserves this distinction.”
Each year, The
Puffin Foundation Ltd. and The
Nation Institute recognize an individual who has challenged
the status quo through distinctive, courageous, imaginative
and socially responsible work of significance. Candidates
are found in a broad range of occupations and pursuits,
and the award is intended to encourage the recipients to
continue their work, and to inspire others to challenge
the prevailing orthodoxies they face in their careers. Mr.
Ratner is the 7th winner of the prestigious award. Previous
recipients are Democracy Now!
host Amy Goodman, educator and
author Jonathan Kozol, journalist
and author Barbara Ehrenreich,
professor and anti-death penalty advocate David
Protess, labor activist Dolores
Huerta, and civil rights pioneer Robert
Parris Moses.
“This prize comes at the right moment when we need
all the courage and daring we can muster to challenge the
lawlessness that characterizes the current administration.
Standing up and fighting for what is right, although often
very unpopular, is at the heart of the work of the remarkable
women and men at the Center for Constitutional Rights,”
said Ratner.
In addition to his work at the Center for Constitutional
Rights, Michael Ratner has also been lecturer of international
human rights litigation at the Yale Law School and the Columbia
School of Law, president of the National Lawyers Guild,
special Counsel to Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
to assist in the prosecution of human rights crimes, and
radio co-host for the civil rights program Law
and Disorder.
In his book Guantánamo: What
the World Should Know, Ratner provided an authoritative
account of what Guantánamo means for the rule of
law, for liberty, democracy, and the right to dissent.
Selected Books and Articles:
Guantanamo:
What the World Should Know (Chelsea Green, 2004)
The
Case Against Donald Rumsfeld: A Trial by Book (New
Press, 2008)
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