Amber Rahman - Advocacy Intern (Former)
Dedicated to transnational justice for all, Amber is committed to organizing towards liberation alongside marginalized, surveilled, and occupied communities within the U.S. and abroad. She is a prospective African American Studies major with a minor in Technology and Society who seeks to study through an abolitionist framework the ways in which technology is being used to further exacerbate and uniquely evolve systems of injustice related to incarceration, policing, and imperialism. She is currently a research assistant in the Ida B. Wells Just Data Lab at Princeton conducting research on global Digital Identification initiatives along with projects related to reimagining public safety. She is involved in Students for Prison Education, Abolition, and Reform (SPEAR) and the Princeton Asylum Project that assists with casework for asylum seekers. Amber was beyond thrilled to work at S.T.O.P. as an Advocacy Intern and to have a chance to resist surveillance alongside impacted communities in her hometown, NYC!