Human rights work Compass Conference Kennedy's life has been devoted to equal justice, to the promotion and protection of basic rights, and to the preservation of the rule of law. For over thirty years, she has worked on diverse human rights issues such as
children's rights,
child labor,
disappearances,
indigenous land rights,
judicial independence,
freedom of expression,
ethnic violence,
impunity, and the environment. She has concentrated specifically on
women's rights, particularly
honor killings,
sexual slavery,
domestic violence,
workplace discrimination, and
sexual assault. She has worked in over 60 countries and led hundreds of human rights delegations. as well as
Human Rights First, and
Inter Press Service in Rome, Italy. She is a patron of the Bloody Sunday Trust (
Northern Ireland) and serves on the Editorial Board of Advisors of the Buffalo Human Rights Law Review. She is on the Advisory Committee for the
International Campaign for Tibet, the
Committee on the Administration of Justice of Northern Ireland, the
Global Youth Action Network, Studies without Borders and several other organizations. She serves on the leadership council of the Amnesty International Campaign to
Stop Violence Against Women and on the Advisory Board of the Albert Schweitzer Institute and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center's National Advisory Council. Neither her
Huffington Post piece nor the news coverage of her advocacy disclosed that she was being paid by the plaintiffs, a fact not made public until 2012. The plaintiffs' lead American lawyer reportedly paid Kennedy $50,000 in February 2010, and the plaintiffs' law firm budgeted $10,000 per month for her services, plus $40,000 in expenses in June 2010. Kennedy was also reportedly given a 0.25 percent share of any money collected from Chevron, worth $40 million if the full amount were to be collected. Kennedy responded that she was "paid a modest fee for the time I spent on the case," but denied that she had any financial interest in the outcome.
Bail reform Kennedy has criticized the treatment of New York teenager
Kalief Browder during his extended time in pretrial detention at Rikers Island. This included video recordings of guards beating Browder, withholding food, and denying medical treatment. In 2016, Kennedy campaigned for adoption of S 5998-A/A 8296-A, referred to as "Kalief's Law," in the [New York State Legislature], which would have guaranteed speedy trials to defendants being held in pretrial detention. On June 9, 2016, the
New York State Assembly passed Kalief's Law by a 138-2 margin. The law was not voted on by the
New York State Senate in 2016, and has been reintroduced by State Senator Daniel L. Squadron during the 2017-2018 legislative session as S 1998-A. Kennedy remains a major voice in the campaign for speedy trial reform in New York, writing in a 2017
New York Daily News editorial that "we make a mockery out of the promise" of a speedy trial. On June 21, 2017, Kennedy, through her organization, Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, posted the $100,000 bail for Pedro Hernandez, a 17-year-old who had spent over a year in pretrial detention at Rikers Island in connection with a shooting investigation. Hernandez had become the face of bail reform following extensive reporting on his incarceration by
Daily News columnist
Shaun King. Hernandez's bail had initially been set at over $250,000, but that sum was lowered to $100,000 after Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights argued such a high sum was disproportional. Less than a week after his release from Rikers Island, Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark announced she would no longer pursue a case against Hernandez. On October 9, 2018, all remaining charges against Hernandez were dropped on the condition he attend college.
Break Bread, Not Families campaign On June 21, 2018, in response to President
Donald Trump's decision to enact a
'zero-tolerance' policy of family separation on immigrants entering the United States illegally, Kennedy joined organizations including the Dolores Huerta Foundation, the
Texas Civil Rights Project and La Union Del Pueblo Entero to launch the 'Break Bread Not Families Immigration Fast and Prayer Chain. The campaign, which raised funds to support the reunification of immigrant families, argued Trump administration policy was "not only immoral, it is also illegal under U.S. and international law." On June 23, 2018, the Break Bread Not Families campaign held a prayer vigil in the American border town of
McAllen, Texas. The vigil marked the start of the campaign that encouraged activists, political figures and celebrities to fast for 24 hours before passing the fast to another public figure. Participants included former
United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro, United States Senator
Ed Markey, Congresswomen
Rosa DeLauro,
Barbara Lee and
Annie McLane Kuster, Congressman
Joseph P. Kennedy III, and actors such as
Aisha Tyler,
Alfre Woodard,
Julia Roberts,
Lena Dunham, and
Evan Rachel Wood. Kennedy joined protestors outside the
Ursula Detention Center, where they temporarily blocked a bus of immigrant children from departing. Kennedy was threatened with arrest by U.S.
Customs and Border Protection agents after repeatedly attempting to speak with officials inside Ursula about the use of chain-link cages to house children separated from their families. The next day, Kennedy and
Dolores Huerta led a march and rally outside the federal immigration camp in
Tornillo, Texas in solidarity with the then-2,400 child immigrants in facilities similar to Tornillo.
Being Catholic Now In 2008, Kennedy was the editor of
Being Catholic Now, Prominent Americans talk about Change in the Church and the Quest for Meaning. The book included essays from prominent Catholics, including
Nancy Pelosi,
Cokie Roberts, now-former
Cardinal McCarrick,
Sister Joan Chittister,
Tom Monaghan,
Bill O'Reilly,
Doris Kearns Goodwin,
Doug Brinkley, and others.
Robert F. Kennedy: Ripples of Hope In 2018, Kennedy published ''Robert F. Kennedy: Ripples of Hope: Kerry Kennedy in Conversation with Heads of State, Business Leaders, Influencers, and Activists about Her Father's Impact on Their Lives''. The book contains interviews from prominent individuals whose lives and careers were influenced by the legacy of Robert F. Kennedy, and explores how Kennedy's legacy touched the fields of entertainment, politics, faith, and activism. Interviewees include
Tony Bennett,
Harry Belafonte,
Bono,
Barack Obama,
John Lewis and activists including
Gloria Steinem and
Marian Wright Edelman. ==Honors==