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Child care and early education advocates, stakeholders, and providers play a critical role in ensuring children have access to vital supports like health care. Repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and restructuring Medicaid would deeply undermine young children’s and parents’ wellbeing. CLASP has created tools to help advocates fight back.
Two reports from CLASP find that the Trump Administration's anti-immigrant policies, actions, and rhetoric are hurting young children in immigrant families. This includes immediate and potentially long-term consequences for babies, toddlers, and preschoolers.
Our Ground, Our Voices builds from the lived experiences of young women of color and focuses on how race, gender, and their intersection impact the structural barriers they face. Addressing these challenges requires large-scale investment and bold policy proposals to achieve meaningful change.
Breaking Barriers, Building Communities
Young Adult and Maternal Mental Health Convening
June 17-19, 2019
Lord Baltimore Hotel, 20 W. Baltimore St, Baltimore, MD 21201
Our Ground, Our Voices builds from the lived experiences of young women of color and focuses on how race, gender, and their intersection impact the structural barriers they face. Addressing these challenges requires large-scale investment and bold policy proposals to achieve meaningful change.
Join CLASP in a series of online engagements focused on healing-centered liberation policy. This multi-part discussion will uplift movements to divest from law enforcement and mass incarceration and invest in historically oppressed communities.
CLASP policy teams have assembled the most critical policy solutions that should be enacted quickly to only get America working again.
This toolkit’s suicide prevention modules offer communities and states guidance and tools to assess their local contexts, populations most impacted by suicide, and promising strategies.
CLASP's youth and young adult mental health framework calls for policies that increase access to healing, transformative mental health supports for this population.
This second set of data focusing on safe communities show how the pandemic has made an already-inequitable system even worse for youth and young adults' health, particularly young people of color.