This publication of the Impact Center for Public Interest Law and the Racial Justice Project at New York Law School was developed in conjunction with the Impact Center’s April 2016 symposium, Equal Before The Law? Civil Rights and Access to Justice. It features 16 articles by prominent policymakers, nonprofit leaders, advocates and scholars on the following topics: Immigration Housing and Community Prisoners’ Rights Tort Liability Women’s Rights Alternative models of Access to Justice The Role of Government Officials Contributors include: Hon. Jonathan Lippman; Paris Baldacci; Amy Barasch; Susanna Blankley; Raymond Brescia; Catherine Carr; Brett Dignam; Joanne Doroshow; Lisa Grumet; Randal Jeffrey; Fidèle Menavanza; Andrew Scherer; Kare...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
[John Jay College\u27s research magazine]. Welcome to the 2019 issue of Impact! This has been anothe...
The civil justice system must discharge its responsibility to preserve and advance the rule of law f...
This publication of the Impact Center for Public Interest Law and the Racial Justice Project at New ...
This publication of the Impact Center for Public Interest Law and the Racial Justice Project at New ...
On April 17, 2015, the Impact Center for Public Interest Law at New York Law School hosted a symposi...
On April 17, 2015, the Impact Center for Public Interest Law at New York Law School hosted a symposi...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
On October 27, 2017, the Stein Center for Law and Ethics in conjunction with the Fordham Law Review ...
The present essay is one of the fruits of a four-year comparative research project entitled Florenc...
The present essay is one of the fruits of a four-year comparative research project entitled Florenc...
Access to Justice was one of a set of intellectual triplets that appeared in the 1970s; its sibling...
[John Jay College’s research magazine.] Welcome to the inaugural issue of Impact, a celebration of t...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
[John Jay College’s research magazine.] Welcome to the inaugural issue of Impact, a celebration of t...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
[John Jay College\u27s research magazine]. Welcome to the 2019 issue of Impact! This has been anothe...
The civil justice system must discharge its responsibility to preserve and advance the rule of law f...
This publication of the Impact Center for Public Interest Law and the Racial Justice Project at New ...
This publication of the Impact Center for Public Interest Law and the Racial Justice Project at New ...
On April 17, 2015, the Impact Center for Public Interest Law at New York Law School hosted a symposi...
On April 17, 2015, the Impact Center for Public Interest Law at New York Law School hosted a symposi...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
On October 27, 2017, the Stein Center for Law and Ethics in conjunction with the Fordham Law Review ...
The present essay is one of the fruits of a four-year comparative research project entitled Florenc...
The present essay is one of the fruits of a four-year comparative research project entitled Florenc...
Access to Justice was one of a set of intellectual triplets that appeared in the 1970s; its sibling...
[John Jay College’s research magazine.] Welcome to the inaugural issue of Impact, a celebration of t...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
[John Jay College’s research magazine.] Welcome to the inaugural issue of Impact, a celebration of t...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
[John Jay College\u27s research magazine]. Welcome to the 2019 issue of Impact! This has been anothe...
The civil justice system must discharge its responsibility to preserve and advance the rule of law f...