Just Freedom
Inside Florida’s Decades-Long Voting Rights Battle

Daniel Rivero


Paper: $28.00
Add Paper To Cart
 
Available for pre-order. This book will be available October, 2025
 

The story of an extraordinary expansion of voting rights and the obstacles holding back its implementation  
 
“The battle to end felony disenfranchisement in Florida is one of the most courageous and inspiring victories for voting rights and justice in modern America. Just Freedom is a sweeping, magisterial history, a brilliantly reported story of a dream and a dream deferred. If you want to understand Florida and what our democracy remains up against, this important book is a must.”—David Daley, author of Antidemocratic: Inside the Far Right’s 50-Year Plot to Control American Elections  
 
Just Freedom is a highly informative journalistic account of the struggle to broaden suffrage to Floridians who have served their sentences as convicted felons in the state’s correctional system. Many of the author’s interviews with Floridians impacted by Amendment 4 are impactful and at times poignant. This is a compelling story that I hope many people will get a chance to discover.”—Seth C. McKee, editor of Jigsaw Puzzle Politics in the Sunshine State  
 
“In Just Freedom, Rivero provides an in-depth and thought-provoking account of Florida’s politics, voting, and elections, then and now.”—Sandra Pavelka, coeditor of Restorative Justice in Legal Systems, Education, and the Community  
 
When Florida citizens voted in 2018 to pass Amendment 4 to the state constitution, which promised to restore voting rights to people with past felony convictions, the decision was celebrated as a civil rights victory and the nation’s largest expansion of voting rights in almost 50 years. In Just Freedom, Daniel Rivero details the advocacy and action that led to this moment—and shows what went wrong in the years after the amendment’s passing.
 
The story begins in the Reconstruction era with Florida’s 1868 lifetime voting ban for people with past felony convictions. The infamous 2000 Bush/Gore election brought the ban to national attention, sparking a wave of activism against it. Rivero follows the 18-year path to Amendment 4 through the grassroots work of people including Howard Simon of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and Desmond Meade, a formerly incarcerated man and president of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition.
 
A journalist who has covered this story for many years, Rivero uses court documents, meeting transcripts, archival videos, interviews, and eyewitness courtroom scenes and street marches to peel back the layers and reveal the motives that supported and opposed this human rights initiative. He shows how political polarization, implementation challenges, and monetary interests have stalled the amendment from becoming fully realized to this day.
 
At once a contemporary legal tale and a series of interwoven stories of people at the center of the fight, this is the account of how 1.4 million Floridians gained the right to vote—and the obstacles still preventing them from doing so. Just Freedom will raise questions and provoke conversations about the lasting hold of Jim Crow–era policies, the power of money, and the nature of the American criminal justice system.  
 
Daniel Rivero is an award-winning investigative reporter, producer, and host for WLRN Public Radio in Miami. His investigations have appeared in the Miami Herald, NPR, the Guardian, ABC News, Splinter, and other outlets.  
 
A volume in the series Government and Politics in the South, edited by Sharon D. Wright Austin and Angela K. Lewis-Maddox

No Sample Chapter Available


There are currently no reviews available

Of Related Interest