In the United States today, an estimated eighty percent of the legal needs of the poor go unmet. The Supreme Court has repeatedly identified access to the courts as a fundamental constitutional right, but a lack of affordable legal counsel has shattered the promise of this right for low-income individuals. There is widespread consensus that this “justice gap” between rich and poor litigants threatens the credibility of the justice system, undermines public confidence in the law, and distorts the accuracy of judicial decision-making. The provision of “unbundled” legal aid has been this decade’s response to the severe shortage of lawyers available to represent poor litigants. Hailed as an innovation in the delivery of legal services, “unbundl...
Whether an individual becomes a party to judicial proceeding involuntarily, as a criminal or civil d...
How should we deliver legal services to low-income clients in need? How should we allocate scarce le...
This article describes an empirical survey of a limited legal assistance program designed to assist ...
In the United States today, an estimated eighty percent of the legal needs of the poor go unmet. The...
When individuals in the United States face civil justice issues, they are not entitled to legal coun...
For decades, the discussion about access to justice has primarily focused on the ability of low–inco...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
An estimated four-fifths of the legal needs of the poor, and the needs of two- to three-fifths of mi...
The number of lawyers in the United States continues to increase, but low and middle-income persons ...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
Given the harsh reality that the quality of justice that people get in this country often depends on...
A New Yorker cartoon depicts a lawyer facing his client, asking the critical question: You\u27ve go...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
The ration of legal services for the poor person accused of a crime has been remarkably thin in most...
Whether an individual becomes a party to judicial proceeding involuntarily, as a criminal or civil d...
How should we deliver legal services to low-income clients in need? How should we allocate scarce le...
This article describes an empirical survey of a limited legal assistance program designed to assist ...
In the United States today, an estimated eighty percent of the legal needs of the poor go unmet. The...
When individuals in the United States face civil justice issues, they are not entitled to legal coun...
For decades, the discussion about access to justice has primarily focused on the ability of low–inco...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
An estimated four-fifths of the legal needs of the poor, and the needs of two- to three-fifths of mi...
The number of lawyers in the United States continues to increase, but low and middle-income persons ...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
Given the harsh reality that the quality of justice that people get in this country often depends on...
A New Yorker cartoon depicts a lawyer facing his client, asking the critical question: You\u27ve go...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
The ration of legal services for the poor person accused of a crime has been remarkably thin in most...
Whether an individual becomes a party to judicial proceeding involuntarily, as a criminal or civil d...
How should we deliver legal services to low-income clients in need? How should we allocate scarce le...
This article describes an empirical survey of a limited legal assistance program designed to assist ...