Membership

At AFJ’s founding, 20 organizations came together to protect constitutional rights. Our strength remains rooted in our more than 150 members, diverse in mission but united in our commitment to justice.

Learn about becoming an AFJ member.

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Residents Organizing for Change FS Neighborhood Partnerships
Neighborhood Partnerships works with communities across Oregon to develop human-centered and emergent solutions to immediate harms; and to power liberatory and transformative change through organizing, policy advocacy, and narrative change. We center those most impacted by racial, housing, and economic injustice, directing our energy and resources toward building community power, knowledge, and capacity.
Oregon Center for Public Policy
OCPP is a non-partisan policy think tank whose mission is to achieve economic justice for all Oregonians through research, analysis, and advocacy. We work closely with community-based organizations to shape our policy and advocacy priorities.
Pueblo Unido
Pueblo Unido creates hope for and amplifies the voices of communities with vulnerable immigration status by connecting them to legal, social, and Indigenous language interpretation services. We envision a world in which all people live in freedom, and where they and their communities can be safe, feel supported, and thrive.
Beyond Toxics
Beyond Toxics uplifts voices from Oregon communities disproportionately impacted by pollution and climate change. We collaborate with other nonprofits, educators, and tribal organizations to build a movement to demand that state and local policies require fair, inclusive, and equitable access to clean air, clean water, and safe spaces for all to live and work in.
Next Up Action Fund
Next Up Action Fund engages the next generation of Oregon's leaders to build political power and fight for a more just and equitable Oregon. We work towards social, racial, gender, and economic justice by scaffolding youth to build individual and collective power, centering Black, Indigenous, youth of color, disabled youth, low-income youth, immigrant youth, queer and trans youth, and youth survivors.