Join us at PubKey DC on Tuesday, March 3rd as we host Pathways to Freedom: Political Prisoners, Reintegration, and the Tools That Sustain Liberty PubKey hosts a conversation at the intersection of freedom, resilience, and technology — examining what happens after political prisoners walk free. ​Authoritarian regimes increasingly rely on detention to silence dissent and fracture democratic movements. But imprisonment does not end movements — and release does not end risk. ​Former political prisoners often reenter a world where surveillance persists, networks are disrupted, and rebuilding civic life requires new tools, new alliances, and new forms of support. ​This discussion brings together former political prisoners and family members to explore the full pathway to freedom: surviving repression, rebuilding agency, and continuing the fight for open societies. ​Participants will share firsthand experiences navigating detention and reintegration, including how freedom technologies — secure communications, decentralized networks, and privacy-preserving tools — help activists reconnect, organize, and operate safely in an era of expanding digital control. ​The event will open with a live PubKey podcast recording featuring Leopoldo López, Berta Valle, and Anaïse Kanimba. ​Core Themes ​Freedom Beyond Release ​Liberation is a transition, not an endpoint — and rebuilding leadership and movements after imprisonment requires sustained support. ​Authoritarian Control in the Digital Age ​How regimes use surveillance, isolation, and information control — and how activists adapt and resist. ​Freedom Tech in Practice ​How secure communication, privacy tools, and decentralized systems help sustain dissent and civic coordination. ​Resilient Communities ​How global networks, diaspora communities, and civil society transform individual courage into durable democratic movements. ​Featured Speakers ​Vladimir Kara-Murza — Russian democracy leader, author, and former political prisoner ​Leopoldo López — Venezuelan democracy leader and former political prisoner ​Evgenia Kara-Murza — Advocate for political prisoners and democracy activist ​Anaïse Kanimba — Human rights advocate and daughter of Paul Rusesabagina of Rwanda ​Berta Valle — Nicaraguan democracy advocate supporting families of political prisoners ​Lilian Tintori — Venezuelan democracy activist and human rights leader ​Why this Conversation Matters ​More than one million people worldwide are imprisoned for political reasons — a number that continues to grow as authoritarian governments refine methods of repression. ​Supporting political prisoners is not only a human rights imperative; it is central to preserving the people, knowledge, and leadership that democratic movements depend on. Understanding how freedom is sustained — socially, politically, and technologically — is essential to building more resilient open societies. ​This event is FREE and PUBLIC. ​ ​🧡🍻🙏 RSVP: https://luma.com/tx007cp8