In this three-article dissertation, I explore access to civil justice issues from several dimensions. Existing data tells us that poor households are significantly less likely than moderate- and high-income households to attempt to resolve civil justice problems, and that black households are significantly less likely than white households to attempt to resolve civil justice problems through formal means. However, we do not know why. The first article finds that among poor respondents, past experiences with public institutions, both legal and non-legal, contributed to a personal narrative about, and strong desire for, self-sufficiency. This narrative made respondents hesitant to seek help for civil justice matters, even if seeking help a...
Americans depend on our civil courts to keep the economy on a fair and firm foundation, but a decade...
When individuals in the United States face civil justice issues, they are not entitled to legal coun...
The past few decades have highlighted the insidious effects of poverty, particularly for poor people...
After many years of inattention, policymakers are now focused on troubling statistics indicating tha...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
This essay examines the state of access to justice in the context of consumer bankruptcy from two va...
In this article, the author attempted to explore the likely institutional barriers that cause obstac...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
Our legal system - and much of the research conducted on that system - often separates people and is...
Money matters in the justice system. If you can afford to purchase your freedom pretrial, if you can...
Decades of empirical research have confirmed the prevalence of troublesome situations involving civi...
Access to justice efforts have been focused more on access than justice, due in part to the framing ...
This dissertation focuses on the misdemeanor court system and how it regulates and manages millions ...
There is a saying in the United States: the justice one receives is the justice one can afford. All ...
This Essay focuses on current civil justice policy in England and Wales and argues that, as a result...
Americans depend on our civil courts to keep the economy on a fair and firm foundation, but a decade...
When individuals in the United States face civil justice issues, they are not entitled to legal coun...
The past few decades have highlighted the insidious effects of poverty, particularly for poor people...
After many years of inattention, policymakers are now focused on troubling statistics indicating tha...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
This essay examines the state of access to justice in the context of consumer bankruptcy from two va...
In this article, the author attempted to explore the likely institutional barriers that cause obstac...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
Our legal system - and much of the research conducted on that system - often separates people and is...
Money matters in the justice system. If you can afford to purchase your freedom pretrial, if you can...
Decades of empirical research have confirmed the prevalence of troublesome situations involving civi...
Access to justice efforts have been focused more on access than justice, due in part to the framing ...
This dissertation focuses on the misdemeanor court system and how it regulates and manages millions ...
There is a saying in the United States: the justice one receives is the justice one can afford. All ...
This Essay focuses on current civil justice policy in England and Wales and argues that, as a result...
Americans depend on our civil courts to keep the economy on a fair and firm foundation, but a decade...
When individuals in the United States face civil justice issues, they are not entitled to legal coun...
The past few decades have highlighted the insidious effects of poverty, particularly for poor people...