
New Books in Law Jamila Michener and Mallory E. Sorelle, "Uncivil Democracy: How Access to Justice Shapes Political Power" (Princeton UP, 2026)
Feb 25, 2026
Mallory SoRelle, a public policy professor at Duke who studies consumer finance and policy effects, and Jamila Michener, a Cornell scholar of inequality and racial justice, discuss how civil legal problems like eviction and debt shape political power. They talk about racialized justice gaps, housing’s ties to health and benefits, pandemic-era court changes, and how tenant organizing can build collective power.
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College Internship Shaped A Research Agenda
- Jamila Michener recalled interning at Queens Legal Services as an undergraduate and seeing overwhelming civil legal need that lawyers couldn't meet.
- She watched clients facing eviction, benefit loss, and harassment and realized addressing root causes, not just cases, mattered.
What The Justice Gap Actually Means
- Mallory E. Sorelle defines the justice gap as the mismatch between widespread civil legal problems and scarce civil counsel for low-income people.
- About 75–80% of low-income Americans face civil legal issues annually yet typically lack representation unlike criminal defendants.
How The Justice Gap Is Racialized
- Access to civil justice is racialized because poverty and discrimination channel Black and Latina people into precarious housing and debts.
- Those same groups lack wealth to hire attorneys and face direct landlord discrimination that raises legal need.


