Writers at Risk Advocacy

Writers at Risk Advocacy

The PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Center at PEN America advocates for writers jailed and persecuted for their free expression around the world.

A collage with a fountain pen writing on paper, red and black blocks, and three signs reading: Writing is not a crime!, When you jail a poet, your weakness is showing!, and Poetry opens our hearts to the world.

Writers face grave risks for documenting the past, reflecting on the present, imagining different futures, and speaking up to hold power to account. When governments target writers, writers are not the only ones at risk – freedom for all is at stake.

The annual Freedom to Write Index, a count of writers jailed worldwide during each calendar year, examines thematic and country-specific threats to writers and their freedom of expression. The Writers at Risk Database tracks a range of threats against individual writers, cultural figures, and journalists, such as legal charges without detention or physical attacks, in addition to detention and imprisonment. Learn more about the methodology used for our Index and Database here. The PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Center was established in 2022 by a donation from the Edwin Barbey Charitable Trust.

Writers Jailed Globally in 2025

Blogs and Interviews

  • Five people sit on a stage in a panel discussion at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. Four listen while one person speaks into a microphone; water bottles are on the tables in front of them.

    ‘We’ve Seen This Before’: Lessons for the Press on Authoritarianism 

    Tuesday December 16
  • A woman wearing a hijab and protective vest stands smiling in front of tents and damaged buildings in an urban area, with people walking in the background.

    In Her Words: Women on Genocide and Rebuilding Gaza

    Wednesday December 3
  • Three PEN America cards with handwritten messages: Writing is not a crime!, When you jail a poet, your weakness is showing!, and Poetry opens our hearts to the world, pinned to a board.

    “Freedom Forbidden”: The Poets Behind Bars for Their Words

    Monday November 17

Latest Updates

  • A person with curly black hair and a serious expression is shown against a dark background, wearing a dark red velvet top.

    Free Narges Coalition Urges Iran to Release and Exonerate Narges Mohammadi Immediately 

    Thursday February 12
  • Three men in suits, one raising a peace sign, walk past barricades outside a building. People on the left, some with cameras, watch and take photos. Most are wearing face masks. Palm trees and columns are visible in the background.

    Sentencing of Jimmy Lai ‘egregious abuse’ of Justice in Hong Kong

    Monday February 9
  • A young man with short dark hair, a beard, and glasses smiles gently at the camera. He is wearing a plaid shirt and a white t-shirt, with a light background behind him.

    Violent Arrest of Iranian Writer An Assault on Free Expression

    Monday January 26

#FreeNarges: Freedom to Write Award Winner 2023

A person with curly black hair and light skin, wearing a dark red velvet top, looks directly at the camera against a plain dark background—a portrait reminiscent of Narges Mohammadi’s striking presence.

Learn more about Narges Mohammadi’s case, add your name to a petition for her release, and send her a message of support. The Free Narges Coalition Steering Committee is led by the Narges Foundation, PEN America, Reporters Without Borders (RSF), and Front Line Defenders. Together, the coalition urges the global community to hold the Islamic Republic government accountable for its abuses. 

Our Staff