Appleseed has achieved enduring accomplishment in areas ranging from children's welfare, education reform,
criminal justice reform,
juvenile justice,
electoral reform, judicial independence, access to health care, immigrant justice, housing development,
government accountability, and the integration of
environmentalism and
community development. Appleseed currently has Centers in
Alabama, Chicago Appleseed, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Georgia,
Hawai`i,
Kansas,
Louisiana,
Massachusetts,
Missouri,
Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, South Carolina, Texas, and Mexico. Some of Appleseed's work has included research on
child protection at the
Mexico-United States border, the
HIV epidemic,
youth homelessness in
Texas, and
broadband internet access in
Kansas. In 2017 and 2020, Appleseed published reports on discrimination against black students in
New York and
Massachusetts respectively. The research by Appleseed received congressional attention from Representatives
Ayanna Pressley and
Katherine Clark, who called on government agencies to rectify the situation. Appleseed did additional research on
child protective services in 2021. ==References==