Children’s Rights offers three general-interest e-mail and RSS feeds:
- Children’s Rights Comprehensive Feed: All new material posted to the site (including press releases, CR Blog items, and updates to our legal cases and policy projects) (E-mail or RSS)
- CR News Feed: All items posted to our press release archive. (E-mail or RSS)
- CR Blog Feed: All new blog posts. (E-mail or RSS)
For those interested in specific cases, we offer the following feeds on our individual reform campaigns:
- Connecticut (Juan F. v. Rell) (RSS or e-mail)
- District of Columbia (LaShawn A. v. Fenty) (RSS or e-mail)
- Georgia (Kenny A. v. Perdue) (RSS or e-mail)
- Michigan (Dwayne B. v. Granholm) (RSS or e-mail)
- Mississippi (Olivia Y. v. Barbour) (RSS or e-mail)
- Missouri (E.C. v. Sherman) (RSS or e-mail)
- New Jersey (Charlie and Nadine H. v. Corzine) (RSS or e-mail)
- New Jersey (K.J. v. DYFS) (RSS or e-mail)
- New Mexico (Joseph A. v. Bolson) (RSS or e-mail)
- Oklahoma (D.G. v. Henry) (RSS or e-mail)
- Rhode Island (Sam and Tony M. v. Carcieri) (RSS or e-mail)
- Tennessee (Brian A. v. Bredesen) (RSS or e-mail)
- Wisconsin (Jeanine B. v. Doyle) (RSS or e-mail)
What is RSS?
RSS is short for Rich Site Summary or, more descriptively, Really Simple Syndication. It enables websites that post new material frequently to deliver information to regular readers automatically, without your having to come back to the site all the time to see what’s new. RSS feeds can be read via RSS readers like the web-based Google Reader or the downloadable NewsGator and FeedDemon, which you can use to collect updates from all your favorite sites in one place.
Additional questions?
Drop us a line at gro.sthgirsnerdlihcnull@snoitacinummoc. We’ll be happy to help you find what you’re looking for.

