You Can Protect Immigrants!

February 2025

A leaflet with simple steps people can take to protect their community from immigration enforcement. Written in plain, accessible language for an all-ages audience that may or may not be highly politically engaged already, but is concerned and wants to help. Font is Atkinson Hyperlegible. Icons from Noun Project.


NYIC KYR Wallet Cards: Print-at-Home Edit

March 2025

New York Immigration Coalition's know-your-rights wallet cards, adapted for printing at home: monochrome images, all text black-on-white, set up in an 8.5x11" PDF. Includes some languages not covered by ILRC's Red Cards.

Originals available online from NYIC as standalone color PDFs. (Please consider donating to them if these are useful!)

Flip on long edge if printing double-sided. (If printing single-sided, cut the page into 5 strips with the card front and reverse attached on the short edge, then fold and tape to make a double-sided card.)


Multilingual Red Card Leaflets

February 2025

The text from Immigration Legal Resource Center's Red Cards (a pocket-sized reference with your rights in an ICE visit), reformatted as a folding leaflet: English statements asserting your rights on the front, text describing your rights in various languages inside. (The multilingual format is mostly a convenience for the distributor and isn't always handier than standalone cards, but might make sense in some situations, like if you're pre-batching mutual aid kits or handing out lit in a setting where you can't stop and talk long.)

These don't stay folded flat on their own, so you might use a paperclip to keep things tidy. I don't recommend printing them on anything thicker than letter paper. I do recommend starting by folding the vertical crease in both directions before you do the horizontal rows.

Using 2022-23 ACS data and other sources, I also made some versions based on demographics in specific locations. These are limited by the languages available in the source files, so may leave out languages that are relevant to the area.

[Beta] For visual contrast, try printing on color paper and using white labels for the front-facing statements of rights. (I think this should work on Avery 5163 label paper, but I haven't tested that format specifically; examples are just full-sheet sticker paper I cut to size).